Discover millions of ebooks, audiobooks, and so much more with a free trial

Only $11.99/month after trial. Cancel anytime.

Unavailable
The Cold Six Thousand
Unavailable
The Cold Six Thousand
Unavailable
The Cold Six Thousand
Audiobook24 hours

The Cold Six Thousand

Written by James Ellroy

Narrated by Craig Wasson

Rating: 4 out of 5 stars

4/5

()

Currently unavailable

Currently unavailable

About this audiobook

The Black Dahlia, The Big Nowhere, L.A. Confidential, White Jazz, American Tabloid... James Ellroy's high-velocity, best-selling novels have redefined noir for our age, propelling us within inches of the dark realities of America's recent history. Now, in The Cold Six Thousand, his most ambitious and explosive novel yet, he puts the whole of the 1960s under his blistering lens. The result is a work of fierce, epic fiction, a speedball through our most tumultuous time.
It begins in Dallas. November 22, 1963. The heart of the American Dream detonated.

Wayne Tedrow Jr., a young Vegas cop, arrives with a loathsome job to do. He's got $6,000 in cash and no idea that he is about to plunge into the cover-up conspiracy already brewing around Kennedy's assassination, no idea that this will mark the beginning of a hellish five-year ride through the private underbelly of public policy.

Ellroy's furiously paced narrative tracks Tedrow's ride: Dallas back to Vegas, with the Mob and Howard Hughes, south with the Klan and J. Edgar Hoover, shipping out to Vietnam and returning home, the bearer of white powder, plotting new deaths as 1968 approaches ...
Tedrow stands witness, as the icons of an iconic era mingle with cops, killers, hoods, and provocateurs. His story is ground zero in Ellroy's stunning vision: historical confluence as American Nightmare.

The Cold Six Thousand is a masterpiece.


From the Hardcover edition.
LanguageEnglish
Release dateMay 8, 2001
ISBN9780739300411
Unavailable
The Cold Six Thousand

More audiobooks from James Ellroy

Related to The Cold Six Thousand

Related audiobooks

Hard-boiled Mystery For You

View More

Related articles

Reviews for The Cold Six Thousand

Rating: 3.801170760233918 out of 5 stars
4/5

342 ratings11 reviews

What did you think?

Tap to rate

Review must be at least 10 words

  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    Did not disappoint after American Tabloid. The writing style is distinctly odd, there's a rhythm that you have to fall into and when you do it's almost like poetry. Once again, I think Ellroy is pretty close to the truth here. If you're into crime fiction, conspiracy theories and American history, this series covers all the bases.
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    Too much the famous Ellroy prose style and not enough good story. It's seems like this is about the same time his fiction in GQ starting to read like Ellroy parody.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    Well I finally got around to reading this and what a blast. Great how the forward starts out talking about how people romanticise a golden era that never was and then *bang* it takes you right into this dark, amoral underbelly of America. Gratuitous violence, corruption, blackmail, all delivered with some snappy one liners - sounds like a an episode of The Sopranos except it makes that lot look positively moral. Oh and enough conspiracy theory to bring Fox Mulder out of retirement.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    This is an astoundingly good novel. What is most striking about it is James Ellroy's buckshot prose, which he has taken to a new level, even for him. It scans almost like beat poetry. Virtually every page (of 700 odd) is studded with short (and I mean *really* short, even by Ellroy's standards), staccato sentences repeating phrases in groups of three: "Frank was a doctor. Frank had bad habits. Frank made bad friends."; "Wayne yawned. Wayne pulled carbons. The fine print blurred." I can see that this could, quite reasonably, prove extremely irritating, but I found that it gave the novel a real rhythm, like a Bo Diddley jungle beat. That sounds pretentious, I know, but if you read it (and buy into it) you'll see what I mean. And it is used to extremely good, often comic effect.As is the case with all Ellroy's novels, life is solitary, poor, nasty, brutish and (for the most part) short, although it must be said the principal protagonists do, by comparison, seem blessed with unfeasible longevity, and the plot is so Byzantine as to make Constantinople look like a one horse town: Cuba, Vietnam, Howard Hughes, the Vegas mafia, JFK's assassination, RFK's assassination, the Klan, Martin Luther King's assassination - it's all here, and in Ellroy's universe it's all inextricably linked. I doubt it has any value as history (whether or not it is, Ellroy is clearly steeped in the history of the era), but it's such an exhilarating read, it really doesn't matter.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    This book is so good I wonder more people haven't read it. Its predecessor "American Tabloid" was terrific as well. I think people are put off by Ellroy's clipped style of writing but I think it goes perfectly with the story. The humor is dark, the anti-heroes brutal and human. This book is for advanced readers because of its complexities. But if you can give it a go you will realize that Ellroy is a genius.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    This novel is excellent. It's intricately plotted, exciting and repellent at the same time. I admire the way Ellroy can write about morally repugnant people but make you care about them as human beings. That's rare. I found the novel so impressive I read it again straight away: that doesn't happen very often. Not easy to read and not a quick read but I would strongly recommend it.
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    The sequel to the far superior "American Tabloid" sees Ellroy stretching his staccato writing style just a little too far. "American Tabloid" dealt with the lead-up to JFK's assassination; here we look at Martin Luther King, with the same destination in mind. Characters repeat from the previous novel, as one would expect, and for most their return is welcomed. The pace is both sprightly and measured, and despite being a large book it passes quickly. The writing though is generally uncomfortable; expect to spend the first 100 pages getting used to Ellroy's use of four word sentences (and shorter). One wonders what it is that happens to writers in the late-twentieth century, when they go from being mildly successful, to being mainstream-conscious, to being painfully self-conscious. What has happened to Ellroy happened also to Martin Amis, which is why "Yellow Dog" was so painful when the reader could still recall the delights of "London Fields" or "Money." Fortunately, the book is saved by the story, which presses hard and fast and encourages the reader at every stage. For completists it is naturally compelling, and in its own way it is definitely worth a look. One's only hope is that the author will think twice about the manner in which he chooses to write in the future.
  • Rating: 2 out of 5 stars
    2/5
    “Anybody who doesn't know that politics is crime has got a few screws loose.”Firstly I should point out that this book is the sequel of "American Tabloid" regarded by many as the basis to the cult movie Pulp Fiction.However, as I can attest, it can be read as a stand alone.''The Cold Six Thousand,'' depicts an American political underbelly teeming with conspiracy and crime as seen through the eyes of three mid-level operatives: Ward Littell, an F.B.I. agent turned mob lawyer; Pete Bondurant, a hired killer and racket operator; and Wayne Tedrow Jr., a Las Vegas policeman and son of a crooked union leader cum casino owner in the city. The novel begins a few minutes after President Kennedy's assassination in 1963 and follows its characters as they become embroiled with the burgeoning civil rights movement, the Las Vegas gambling industry and the Vietnamese opium trade, and ends with the assassinations of both Martin Luther King and Robert F. Kennedy in 1968. The F.B.I., the Ku Klux Klan, the C.I.A., Cuban political expatriates, J.Edgar Hoover and Howard Hughes to name but a few also make an appearance and at some time or other the three main characters will end up working for or with each of these entities -- sometimes several of them at once. This novel will not teach anybody anything new about any of the events that take place throughout, instead it leans very heavily on the side of the conspiracy theories of the time. It is richly peppered with scenes of violence although this rarely if ever gets gratuitous and plenty of what is no doubt regarded as gangster slang of the time. Many of the sentences are only two or three words long and many are repeated tabloid style yet my copy of this novel is nearly 700 pages long so is a pretty hefty tome.Now to me the length rather than being it's strength is it's weakness. The tale is just too far reaching and I must admit that on more than one occasion I was tempted to throw in the towel with it however, I did soldier on and complete it. Personally I would have preferred Ellroy concentrated on one historical event rather than so many. Nor did I really find the three main characters with their somewhat convoluted and entwined alliances that convincing, this was particularly true of that of Ward Littell. In the end I felt that it was OK but reads like the author's pet hobby-horse rather than a true work of fiction IMHO and ultimately was left frustrated instead of enlightened by it.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    This is a very disturbing novel regarding the 1960s, the mob, J.Edgar Hoover and the three major assassinations.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    WARNING: reading more than 50 pages of this book after a six hour Marathon Final Fantasy Crisis Core, finishing The Catcher in the Rye and watching a crappy Bruce Willis movie may result in total and absolute psychological melt down… that being said I’ma go put on my aluminum foil hat and protect my cake flour cuz I know them aliens want it!!!
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    James Ellroy’s second volume exploring the illicit and illegal activities shaping U.S. political history, The Cold Six Thousand is as sweeping in scope and nefarious in character as the first, American Tabloid. Many of the major characters return, and it’s amazing (and darkly humourous) to see how much of what “we know” can be attributed to the hidden machinations of Ellroy’s imagined cabal. It’s conspiracy theory, to be sure, believable not as literal truth but as type: this is how things work, with individual and idiosyncratic agendas metastasizing into social trends and iconic events. Cold Six Thousand is book-ended with political assassinations, and fraught with all manner of thievery and murder in between, a comment on the American Sixties and explanation for what follows.It seems to me that Ellroy trades in ideal types rather than historical truths. His imagined transcripts of confidential phone conversations between J. Edgar Hoover and undercover operatives; his briefs and document inserts from confidential CIA files; his headlines and ledes from media stories – all of these are utterly convincing. I don’t know how the transcript of a CIA bugging operation reads, but Ellroy has convinced me he knows. I don’t know how mafiosi run their businesses, but it sure seems like they would unfold the way Ellroy depicts them here. Whether racist slang among 1960s U.S. adults sounded like his dialogue reads, is again unclear to me. But it never reads like he's making it up. The chapter summarizing the history and significance of Viet Nam to U.S. political-military security from 1954 to 1964(in the form of a CIA brief from one agent to another as preamble to an unsanctioned covert ops) is deft without being reductive. And it still reads like a government brief.So if nothing happened quite the way he writes it, I’d bet it happened something like his version. (And the real point, perhaps, is that not only won’t we ever know, we can’t know. Nothing records this level of history. Ellroy is the closest we’d ever have. Put another way: it isn’t falsifiable, the very essence of fiction.) Ellroy’s history is at the level of the floorboards, what’s fascinating is how his version dovetails with the head-height version(s) bandied about in school textbooks and popular culture.And his prose is something else, much more stylised than the first volume. I agree with those thinking a reader will either love or hate it, his staccato word flow and almost adjective-less prose weaves a peculiar aura around the events he describes. Hardboiled is perhaps true but beside the point, really, with descriptive passages as clipped and repetitive as dialogue. Ellroy has provided the written equivalent of a mantra or recitation, with the sound of his words as important as their meaning. A singular achievement, in conception as well as in sustained performance.