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Brothers Keepers

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
A HARD CASE CRIME CLASSIC: A quirky caper novel from the 3-time Edgar Award winner and mystery Grand Master, Donald E. Westlake!

What will a group of monks do when their New York City monastery is threatened with demolition to make room for a new high-rise?
…Anything they have to. “Thou Shalt Not Steal” is only the first of the Commandments to be broken as the saintly face off against the unscrupulous over that most sacred of relics, a Park Avenue address.
Returning to bookstores for the first time in three decades, Brothers Keepers offers not only a master class in comedy from one of the most beloved mystery writers of all time but also a surprisingly heartfelt meditation on loss, temptation, and how we treat our fellow man.
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    • Kirkus

      December 1, 2018
      A tiny band of monks facing the loss of their monastery in midtown Manhattan fight back in this slight, humorous 1975 charmer.You wouldn't expect to find the Crispinite Order of the Novum Mundum lodged on Park Avenue between 51st and 52nd streets, and come New Year's Day, you probably won't. While they were meditating on otherworldly matters, their 99-year-lease, last renewed in 1876, was optioned from Daniel Flattery, the current owner of their land, by developer Roger Dwarfmann, who plans to raze historic structures all along the block to make way for a 67-story office building. The 16 sort-of-cloistered monks can't even find their copy of the lease, and they haven't a clue how to stop the wrecking ball from exiling them to the likes of New Paltz. The most important upshot of a delegation's visit to Dan Flattery is that Brother Benedict, the winsome narrator who's been a member of CONM for 10 years, falls head over heels in love with Eileen Flattery Bone, their leaseholder's daughter. Anyone familiar with Westlake's peerless crime comedies (Help I Am Being Held Prisoner, 1974, etc.) will be confident that the unlikely romance between Brother Benedict, ne Charles Rowbottom, and the divorcée who predictably describes herself as "the sincerest of Flatterys" will end in laughter, and the high point of the tale is this modern Candide's trip to Puerto Rico to plead both his order's case and his own to a young woman with nothing but sun and surf on her mind.Not much in the way of felonies, and most of the other 15 monks are ciphers. But Westlake's sweetly consecrated hero, at once disconcertingly direct and utterly clueless, will bring you to your feet cheering for his impossible cause.

      COPYRIGHT(2018) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

    • Booklist

      January 1, 2019
      Inexplicably out of print for more than 30 years, Westlake's 1975 novel about the residents of a New York City monastery who desperately search for a way to stave off the impending demolition of their home is one of his best stand-alones. Narrated by Brother Benedict (in his pre-monk days, he was Charles Rowbottom, jilted fianc�), the book showcases the kind of careful, precise?but seemingly effortless?character-building and devilishly clever plotting that earned Westlake a devoted following among mystery fans. Sporting a spiffy new cover design (Paul Mann's painting perfectly captures the flavor of the novel), the book will either be a welcome trip down memory lane for Westlake's older fans or a first-time read for his younger fans. Either way, this delightful mixture of mirth and mystery is classic Westlake.(Reprinted with permission of Booklist, copyright 2019, American Library Association.)

    • Kirkus

      December 1, 2018
      A tiny band of monks facing the loss of their monastery in midtown Manhattan fight back in this slight, humorous 1975 charmer.You wouldn't expect to find the Crispinite Order of the Novum Mundum lodged on Park Avenue between 51st and 52nd streets, and come New Year's Day, you probably won't. While they were meditating on otherworldly matters, their 99-year-lease, last renewed in 1876, was optioned from Daniel Flattery, the current owner of their land, by developer Roger Dwarfmann, who plans to raze historic structures all along the block to make way for a 67-story office building. The 16 sort-of-cloistered monks can't even find their copy of the lease, and they haven't a clue how to stop the wrecking ball from exiling them to the likes of New Paltz. The most important upshot of a delegation's visit to Dan Flattery is that Brother Benedict, the winsome narrator who's been a member of CONM for 10 years, falls head over heels in love with Eileen Flattery Bone, their leaseholder's daughter. Anyone familiar with Westlake's peerless crime comedies (Help I Am Being Held Prisoner, 1974, etc.) will be confident that the unlikely romance between Brother Benedict, ne Charles Rowbottom, and the divorc�e who predictably describes herself as "the sincerest of Flatterys" will end in laughter, and the high point of the tale is this modern Candide's trip to Puerto Rico to plead both his order's case and his own to a young woman with nothing but sun and surf on her mind.Not much in the way of felonies, and most of the other 15 monks are ciphers. But Westlake's sweetly consecrated hero, at once disconcertingly direct and utterly clueless, will bring you to your feet cheering for his impossible cause.

      COPYRIGHT(2018) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

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  • English

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