Member Reviews

First book I've read by Mr Abramo so I did not know what to expect. I was not disappointed as the book gripped me from the beginning to end, highly recommended!

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Every morning when I walk by Dunkin Donuts at the train station there is a line of people buying coffee. I’m not a fan of their coffee but considering they sell over 30 cups of coffee per second, many are. I walk past and go to one of the several small cafés or even the ubiquitous coffee shop of Pequod’s first mate. As I was reading J.L. Abramo’s upcoming release, Coney Island Avenue (Down & Out Books), I realized that this book wasn’t for me, but that doesn’t mean that others would not enjoy it.

The novel is a continuation of Abramo’s Gravesend which is set in the Homicide Division of the 61st Precinct of the New York City Police Department. Set in the summer, a young couple is executed in a Coney Island apartment. As the detectives begin to investigate these gruesome murders, more dead bodies get discovered.

In telling the story of Coney Island Avenue, Abramo’s chooses to use rapid fire segments of only a few paragraphs in length. I found this narrative style which focuses on jumping between many plot lines confusing. Did I mention there are characters? Abramo even begins Coney Island Avenue with a “Cast of Characters” — there are 58!

But to mangle my metaphor from the start of this review, even though Abramo’s book might not be my cup of tea, it could easily be yours.

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I am now and forever a fan of J.L. Abramo. What a great book!!! I could not put it down. It has everything and more to keep you glued to the pages. It starts off good and never lets up. Cops investigating a killing and in this capacity we are introduced to a variety of characters. The back story, learning about the characters while they interact will have you talking to the book!!!! This is my second book by Mr. Abramo, but it will not be the last.
Thanks to NetGalley, the author and the publisher for the advanced reading copy of this book in return for my honest review.

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An excellent read, worthy of comparison to Ed McBain’s 87th Precinct series.

Coney Island Avenue by J.L. Abramo
Down & Out Books



“My sister’s boy is popping the question.”
“What question is that, why the eggplant is always greasy?”
“He bought a ring for his girlfriend.”
“Jesus, Augie, what kind of uncle are you. Couldn’t you talk him out of it?”
“You’re a hopeless cynic, Tommy. I haven’t met her, but my sister says she seems like a nice girl.”
“They all seem like nice girls, and then they grow up and become their mothers.
Shamus Award winning author J.L. Abramo’s new release, Coney Island Avenue (Down & Out Books), continues the story of the New York Police Department’s Detective Squad in the 61st Precinct, Coney Island Avenue, Brooklyn, N.Y., a squad first visited by Abramo in his acclaimed novel Gravesend. Set in the dog days of August, the new novel opens with a multiple homicide, that of the young man and woman referred to above. Their execution is perpetrated by two guys. The first, dressed in a gray business suit, looked good enough that he could pass for a banker. The second, is a big ape in a blue jogging suit, or as his not a banker partner notes, a “goombah outfit,” the appropriate dress for a mob enforcer known as Paulie Bonebreaker. As the Detectives of the 61st begin investigating, more bodies turn up, the crime itself is not all that simple. While that investigation evolves, additional crimes and cases are dropped on the squad. Abramo keeps the story moving in real time, clever dialogue and small rapid fire paragraphs jump us between the various plot lines. The squad is a mix of veterans and squad newbies. Their personal stories, their families or the lack thereof is woven into the narrative. A total of 58 characters appear in the book, from bakers to mob bosses, from Russian criminals to corrupt building contractors, the police and the detectives, through Abramo’s skill we get a sense of each. The story and the members of the 61st Squad are life-like, compelling and believable. As a police procedural, the investigation and procedures followed are spot on, it compares favorably to the best of Ed McBain’s 87th Precinct series. Abramo is an accomplished writer, his West Coast set series about PI Jake Diamond, revived and also available from Down & Out Books is award winning. But Abramo grew up in the Gravesend area of Brooklyn, NY. He knows the streets, the neighborhoods and its people. And he knows police, as this bit from two uniform officers talking while on stationary surveillance…
“I don’t know about you, but I could eat a horse,” he said.
“Pinto or Appaloosa?”

I hope J.L. Abramo is working on other novels involving the 61st Precinct, Gravesend and Coney Island Avenue are both excellent reads. I cannot wait for the next in this brilliant series.

I am grateful to Down & Out Books and NetGalley for allowing me the opportunity to read Coney Island Avenue.

--John Stickney

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