Synopses & Reviews
I'd paid a lawyer $175 to complete the paperwork and the deal was done ... It was Maurizio Viglioni whose father was a failed Philadelphia engineer, Maurizio Viglioni whose mother had run away with a stockbroker ... I'd discarded it like an unwanted suit. When I married thesenator's daughter, it was as Maurice Valentine.
Maurice Valentine is being groomed by important people for big things. He's a noted Los Angeles architect whose commissions take him from the developing Las Vegas strip to the top-secret atomic-test sites in the surrounding desert, jobs that have him mixing with gangsters, politicians, Brat-Pack hangers-on, and other powerful players. Poised to achieve even greater professional heights, Valentine appears unstoppable.
Then Mallory Walker enters his life, presenting herself as an heiress with a keen eye for architecture. Valentine, normally a cool hand at the casual affair, falls head over heels and whisks the mysterious beauty off to Las Vegas for some time alone. At a swank penthouse party where the high rollers gather -- Lana Turner's there, and Frank Sinatra -- Valentine introduces Mallory to the powerful Paul Mantilini, the mobster who's made Valentine's career. It's then that Valentine gets the first inkling that something's amiss, that Mallory might have an agenda at odds with his own.
At last the moment they've been waiting for has arrived, the evening's spectacle. A piercing flash of light is followedby a bubble of boiling red rising from the horizon: forty-five miles across the Nevada desert, the Atomic Energy Committee has detonated another of its 4,600 A-bombs. The crowd cowers, stumbles, readjusts, reaches for their drinks, hoping to hide the terror for a moment longer behind their martini glasses and champagne flutes. Valentine's life will never be the same -- not because of that explosion, but for what comes immediately after. From the corner of his eye, he sees Mallory walking toward him, but doesn't see the nickel-plated pistol until it's too late. Confused, he calls out to her. She raises the gun, points it, and fires.
How could Valentine have found himself so far removed fromthe carefully constructed, tidy life he'd been building all these years? The discovery of Mallory's true motive, and of her relationship with Mantilini and the elite of both Las Vegas and Palm Springs, will send Valentine down a path of twisted schemes, murder, and lies within lies -- and will force him to make a fateful decision that will save one life and end another.
Review
"A thriller as sharp as a new laser print of DOUBLE INDEMNITY." Kirkus Reviews (Starred)
Review
"A classic piece of Hollywood noir, with a page-turning plot as tightly crafted as a Chinese puzzle." Seattle Times
Review
"A superb crime novel....Richard Rayner is a multitalented writer...Avidly captured feeling of a bygone world." Chicago Tribune
Review
"Entertaining and atmospheric period noir .... evokes Vegas with a [lively] eye." Dallas Morning News
Review
"Thrilling ... Plot twists and betrayals, bomb blasts and unrequited love all add up to a classy neo-noir." Publishers Weekly
Review
"Rayner uses the unsettling realities beneath Las Vega's glossy surfaces as symbols of a deeper and more sinister social corruption." Library Journal
Review
"This is rich territory, and Rayner makes skilled use of the postwar nuttiness and the cinematic milieu." New York Times Book Review
Synopsis
A story of mobsters, murder, and the birth of Las Vegas is set against the backdrop of the McCarthy hearings and the testing of the A-Bomb in the Nevada desert.
About the Author
Born in England, Richard Rayner now lives in Los Angeles. His previous books include the memoir The Blue Suit and the novels The Cloud Sketcher, L.A. Without a Map, and Murder Book. His work has appeared in the New Yorker, the New York Times, and many other publications.