Synopses & Reviews
It is 1955 in Las Vegas. Sammy and Satchmo are headlining the big hotels - where the casino operators and the color bar say a black man can't buy a drink or a meal or a room. Until now. The Chicago mob man Mo Weiner is bankrolling ex-boxer Worthless Worthington Lee and the city's first all-black hotel-casino. The Ivory Coast is rising up from the dust, on the wrong side of town. And out of the shadows steps Deacon, a white horn player with a dark past and a genius for jazz. Mo mistakes him for a hitman. Worthless takes him for a friend. Anita, the mixed-race beauty he falls for, wants him for herself. And Haney, the corrupt and racist copy who runs this hot desert oasis of sin and sand, wants him rubbed out. Deacon is holding a dangerous hand, and a dangerous secret, spun inside a deadly web of deceit and double-crosses. The Ivory Coast is coming, rushing this sprawling drama toward the last Sunday in May, when the whole town will be black and white and blood-red all over...
A suspenseful first novel of remarkable imagination, scope and energy, The Ivory Coast is impossible to ignore and, once begun, impossible to resist.
Review
"What a great first novel! Charles Fleming has captured all the glitzy glamour of Las Vegas in the 1950s and brought it absolutely to life.
The Ivory Coast is a terrific story from a talented storyteller." --Dominick Dunne
"Impressive...Amid all the hard-boiled James Ellroy-inspired drama what emerges here is a surprisingly sensitive story about the historic daringness and personal sacrifices that made integration possible. Yet Fleming never loses sight of the neon-lit sleaze of Las Vegas, making this sure-bet thriller as satisfyingly sordid as it is socially responsible." --Los Angeles Times
"Palpable...A kind of tenderness hovering behind the main players draws you in." --Houston Chronicle
"A promising fiction debut." --Seattle Post-Intelligencer
"This thoroughly engaging tale adroitly mixes an intriguing story with the history of the early days of the famed desert city." --The Poisoned Pen
Synopsis
With "The Ivory Coast, " aJformer writer for "Newsweek" and "Variety" pens an epic debut novel about Las Vegas in the '50s and the dreamers, crooks, and lovers caught in its glare.
Synopsis
It is 1955 in Las Vegas, and the Chicago mob man Mo Weiner is bankrolling ex-boxer Worthless Worthington Lee and the city's first all-black hotel-casino. The Ivory Coast is rising up from the dust, on the wrong side of town. And out of the shadows steps Deacon, a white horn player with a dark past and a genius for jazz. Mo mistakes him for a hitman. Worthless takes him for a friend. Anita, the mixed-race beauty he falls for, wants him for herself. And Haney, the corrupt and racist cop who runs this hot desert oasis of sin and sand, wants him rubbed out.
About the Author
Charles Fleming is a veteran entertainment industry reporter and the author of
After Havana (Minotaur, January 2004), as well as
The New York Times bestselling T
he Goomba's Guide to Life and High Concept: Don Simpson and the Hollywood Culture of Excess.