Clockers: A Novel

Couverture
Macmillan, 4 mars 2008 - 624 pages

Novelist and Academy Award–nominated screenwriter Richard Price's bestselling second novel offers "an unforgettable picture of inner-city decay and despair" (USA Today)

At once an intense mystery and a revealing study of two men, a veteran homicide detective and an innercity crack dealer, on opposite sides of an endless war. Clockers is "powerful . . . harrowing . . . remarkable" (The New York Times Book Review).

 

Pages sélectionnées

Table des matières

Section 1
3
Section 2
31
Section 3
49
Section 4
83
Section 5
102
Section 6
117
Section 7
134
Section 8
139
Section 18
316
Section 19
331
Section 20
339
Section 21
359
Section 22
379
Section 23
396
Section 24
416
Section 25
430

Section 9
159
Section 10
177
Section 11
188
Section 12
207
Section 13
227
Section 14
248
Section 15
260
Section 16
271
Section 17
295
Section 26
442
Section 27
453
Section 28
463
Section 29
485
Section 30
494
Section 31
511
Section 32
519
Section 33
531
Droits d'auteur

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À propos de l'auteur (2008)

Author and screenwriter Richard Price was born in the Bronx, New York on October 12, 1949. He received a BS degree from Cornell University, an MFA from Columbia University, and a Mirillees Fellowship in fiction at Stanford University. His first novel, The Wanderers, was published in 1974 and was adapted into a film by director Philip Kaufman in 1979. His novel Clockers was nominated for the National Book Critics Circle Award and was made into a movie by Spike Lee in 1994. His screenwriting credits include The Color of Money (1986), Sea of Love (1989), Mad Dog and Glory (1992), and Ransom (1996). Price won several awards for his writing on the television series The Wire. He has written for numerous publications including The New York Times, Esquire Magazine, the Village Voice, and Rolling Stone. In 1999, he received the American Academy of Arts and Letters Award in Literature. In 2015, Price published his bestselling novel, The Whites, under the pseudonym Harry Brandt.

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