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The People's Police
The People's Police: A Novel | Norman Spinrad
4 posts | 1 read | 4 to read
Norman Spinrad, a National Book Award finalist for his short fiction collection The Star-Spangled Future, has now written The People's Police, a sharp commentary on politics with a contemporary, speculative twist. Martin Luther Martin is a hard-working New Orleans cop, who has come up from the gangland of Alligator Swamp through hard work. When he has to serve his own eviction notice, he decides he's had enough and agrees to spearhead a police strike. Brothel owner and entrepreneur J. B. Lafitte also finds himself in a tight spot when his whorehouse in the Garden District goes into foreclosure. Those same Fat Cats responsible for the real estate collapse after Katrina didn't differentiate between social strata or vocation. MaryLou Boudreau, aka Mama Legba, is a television star and voodoo queenwith a difference. The loa really do ride and speak through her. These three, disparate people are pulled together by a single moment in the television studio when Martin, hoping for publicity and support from the people against the banks, corporate fat cats, and corrupt politicians. But no one expects Papa Legba himself to answer, and his question changes everything. "What do you offer?" At the Publisher's request, this title is being sold without Digital Rights Management Software (DRM) applied.
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Ddzmini
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A few great suppresses in the mail today so excited to get 😋📖📚 #BCCUNBOXING LOVING IT 👏🏼👏🏼👏🏼😋😍📖📖

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kammartinez
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Pickpick

Full review here: http://wp.me/p21txV-Ah

I wasn't entirely sure what I would be getting when I picked up this book, except that there'd be loas in it, and Mardi Gras. But boy, am I glad I picked it up anyway, because this is a REALLY fun read :D. The language is the first thing that hooked me, but what kept me reading were the characters, plus this book deals with some very important socioeconomic and political issues. A+ read :D.

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kammartinez
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kammartinez
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This is the first time I've come across Spinrad's work, but honestly, I couldn't say no to this. New Orleans, Mardi Gras, voodoo and loas? Sounds like a fantastic read to me - even if it IS well past Fat Tuesday by now ;D.

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