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Every Last Drop: A Novel

Every Last Drop: A Novel

  • Paperback
  • Author: Charlie Huston
  • Publisher: Del Rey
  • Release Date: September 2008
  • ISBN-10: 0345495888
  • ISBN-13: 9780345495884
  • List Price: $14.00

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Summaries and Customer Reviews provided by Amazon

Summary

“[Charlie Huston’s] action scenes are unparalleled in crime fiction and his dialogue is so hip and dead-on that Elmore Leonard should be getting nervous.”
–Publishers Weekly (starred review), on Half the Blood of Brooklyn

It’s like this: a series of bullet-riddled bad breaks has seen rogue Vampyre and terminal tough guy Joe Pitt go from PI for hire to Clan-connected enforcer to dead man walking in a New York minute. And after burning all his bridges, the only one left to cross leads to the Bronx, where Joe’s brass knuckles and straight razor can’t keep him from running afoul of a sadistic old bloodsucker with a bad bark and a worse bite. Even if every Clan in Manhattan is hollering for Joe’s head on a stick, it’s got to be better than trying to survive in the outer-borough wilderness.

So it’s a no-brainer when Clan boss Dexter Predo comes looking to make a deal. All Joe has to do to win back breathing privileges on his old turf is infiltrate an upstart Clan whose plan to cure the Vyrus could expose the secret Vampyre world to mortal eyes and set off a panic-driven massacre. Not cool. But Joe’s all over it. To save the Undead future, he just has to wade neck-deep through all the archenemies, former friends, and assorted heavy hitters he’s crossed in the past. No sweat? Maybe not, but definitely more blood than he’s ever seen or hungered for. And maybe even some tears–over the horror and heartbreaking truth about the evil men do no matter who or what they are.

Praise for Charlie Huston and his Joe Pitt novels

“In conceiving his world (a New York City divided by vampire clans, each with different reasons to hate Pitt), Huston gives a fading genre a fresh afterlife. [Grade:] A.”
–Entertainment Weekly

“[Huston] creates a world that is at once supernatural and totally familiar, imaginative, and utterly convincing.”
–The Philadelphia Inquirer

Customer Reviews

Average Rating: Score = 4.0 Score = 4.0 Score = 4.0 Score = 4.0 Score = 4.0

getting less interesting with each and every book

Rating: Score = 3 Score = 3 Score = 3 Score = 3 Score = 3

As good as the first book was, I find that each subsequent one gets less interesting and important. With "Every Last Drop", Huston seems like a writer who is just trying to put out a novel to sell, rather than one to tell a story. Simply put, there just isn't a story here, or at least not one worth telling/reading. The characters have no development at all with any of these novels, especially not Pitt. He's just a carbon copy of himself from the last 3 books. Good story telling entails characters growing with each experience, not holding stagnant. The "Dexter" series (books and TV) is a fine example of excellent character development and story telling. This is just bland and makes for an OK read if you're into the Pitt series at all.

Gritty

Rating: Score = 5 Score = 5 Score = 5 Score = 5 Score = 5

I thought I was back in the land of Mickey Spillane. Outspoken, hard riding,
bullet proof and with 3 days worth of whiskers. Oh yea, its Joe Pitt. Today's answer to Mickey Spillane. This is my second favorite tough guy with a very well hidden heart of gold. I just can't get enough of Joe Pitt. And did I mention he is also vampyre? Just to add a little more flavor to the story. This guy is rough, tough, and keeps on pounding to the end of the story. Give him 5 stars for a excellent mystery.

Joe Pitt--Still Lost in Horror Noir!

Rating: Score = 4 Score = 4 Score = 4 Score = 4 Score = 4

The four Joe Pitt novels are extraordinary examples at stylistic prose and horror noir at their best. The casual reader should be advised that "Every Last Drop" is not a good novel to begin one's sojourn in this excellent series. In fact, each subsequent novel has become murkier and more entangling than the previous entry. Huston's free style prose is sometimes hard to follow since it is dialogue in real time with no indications of "he said... she said". But stay with it---it is worth it!

Charlie Huston continues fleshing out his strangely intriguing world in which gang-like "clans" of vampires (humans who have been infected with the Vyrus) have divided Manhatten Island into territories and fiefdoms, each with its own governing structure, borders, spheres of influence, and purpose in existing. Huston effectively creates a world where vampires coexist with unknowing humans and where the sociological, psychological, and philosophical conflicts between individuals and between clans make for stunning parodies and commentaries on our lifestyles.

"Every Last Drop" continues the saga of rogue vampire PI Joe Pitt who, after the action in "Half The Blood In Brooklyn," has been ousted from his Manhatten stomping grounds and is now biding time in the wastelands of the Bronx where he has some heavy duty encounters with some old (and new) enemies that leave him damaged in more ways than one. Unlikely as it is, Dexter Predo "rescues" him and offers him a new spot in the Manhatten elite if he will infiltrate the new clan, Cure, to secure inside information on its search for a cure for the Vyrus.

Joe's reentry into the clannish world of Manhatten sets off a storm of events and conflicts that soon has him encountering, willingly or unwillingly, the Coalition, the Society, the Hood, and the Enclave. Joe once again plays all sides against each other, remains ever the loner, and seemingly starts a clan war to get at what he really wants...think back to the end of "Half The Blood In Brooklyn".

Peforming one of the tasks necessary to keep him alive (there are many in this convulted plot), Joe discovers a grimly explosive secret surrounding one of the most powerful clans--a secret so potentially explosive that the entire clan structure may go to war because of it. Joe's quest in this novel is agonizing to follow since it is accompanied by a great amount of violence, maiming, and depressing revelations. Yet, Joe is resolute through it all as he seeks an important reunion with someone from his past. I strongly recommend this effort for Huston fans but I urge first-timers to start with "Already Dead" and begin the fun trip toward "Every Last Drop."

A Sanguinary Experience

Rating: Score = 4 Score = 4 Score = 4 Score = 4 Score = 4

Let me first say that I love the works of Charlie Huston. All of his books I have read until now have been five star, rock-n-roll, pull-no-punches, burn the barn down, extraordinary works. His Caught Stealing: A Novel trilogy is one of my favorite series, and his Joe Pitt vampire stories, of which this is the fourth, are howlingly good. Yet I had a reservation about this latest book which I'll explain in just a sec.

For those of you running across this series for the first time, do yourself a favor and get the first book in this series, Already Dead: A Novel, and start reading from the beginning. This is a darkly lyrical, powerfully told story of vampires in NYC, but unlike any vampire story you've read before. In Huston's world, vampires mostly lead lives of quiet desperation, drink whiskeys with a beer back, smoke cheap cigarettes, scrabble to pay the rent, and have to contend with a dangerous addiction to blood. Gotta have it, or you will die. However, you just can't start knocking people off or the boys in blue will catch wise and then it's genocide for vampires time. To protect their existence, the vampires have formed into clans who divide up Manhattan and police themselves ruthlessly and contend with other clans much like rival gangs. Huston's vampires are not romantic figures nor are they any more horrific than humans. They were once ordinary people struggling to get by and now they're the same people, with a need for blood, struggling to get by. The protagonist, Joe Pitt, is a big tough guy, living without clan membership, struggling to get by in the cracks of vampire and human society, working gigs as a bouncer or sometimes doing investigative jobs for some of the vampire clans. Huston's works are filled with many memorable characters just as real life is. There are transvestite, hippie, financial mafia, and gay and lesbian rights vampires in these noirish tales with more to do with crime fiction than horror.

For those of you who have read the first three books and are just checking the reviews of this one before purchasing, c'mon, who are you kidding? You're going to buy this book and read it regardless of what anyone says here because you already know this series is more addictive than blood. In this fourth installment, Joe is living in the hinterlands of the Bronx and not enjoying himself so much when he is captured and mutilated by an old enemy. "Rescued" by Predo, another old enemy and ordered back to Manhattan to spy on old friends. The story is engaging, violent, noirish and fun, just like the first three tales. The story rockets forward with Joe, ever the spoiler, precipitating what looks like will be an all out war between the Society, the Coalition, the Enclave, and The Cure (a brand new vampire clan). And there the story stops, which is my peeve with this book. We are left hanging with no resolution of the big conflict set up in the first 250 pages. Huston has always written brilliant tales that you leave with a satisfying conclusion to the crises created in the novel, even if there is always room to create another crisis for the next novel. He doesn't do that here, and this book feels like the first half of a book as opposed to a whole book in and of itself, and I was disappointed that the story just stopped with no resolution. I didn't like being set up for fireworks and then finding I will have to wait I don't know how many months for a resolution. So while this is a great story, it is only half the story. Therefore I am awarding four stars for the first time to a Huston novel. Normally I would counsel people to grab Huston's books as fast as they can get their hands on them, but this time my advice is to wait to read this one until the next one comes out and them read them together. Then again, I've never been one for delayed gratification, so if you don't mind half now, then half later, go ahead, this is still the darkly enjoyable Pitt series in fine form.

Better and Better ...

Rating: Score = 4 Score = 4 Score = 4 Score = 4 Score = 4

This series has grown on me and each new installment gets better and better ... the characters are interesting, gritty and consistent ... the world they exist in continues to evolve ... I cannot wait for the next book, perhaps my biggest disappointment here as they only run about 250 pages each ...