OUR STORE IS CLOSED ON ANZAC DAY: THURSDAY 25 APRIL

Close Notification

Your cart does not contain any items

Pleasantville

Attica Locke

$24.99

Paperback

Not in-store but you can order this
How long will it take?

QTY:

English
Serpents Tail
27 April 2016
It's 1996, Bill Clinton has just been re-elected and in Houston a mayoral election looms. As ever, the campaign focuses on the African-American neighbourhood of Pleasantville, which has swung every race since 1949. Axel Hathorne, former chief of police and son of Pleasantville's founder Sam Hathorne, could be on the verge of becoming Houston's first black mayor. And then a teenager goes missing and Axel's campaign manager is charged with her murder. Sam is determined that Jay Porter, the lawyer from Locke's debut Black Water Rising, will defend his grandson. Jay himself working on his first murder case, a trial that threatens to blow the entire community wide open, and reveal the lengths that those with power are willing to go to hold onto it. LONGLISTED FOR THE BAILEYS PRIZE 2016.

By:  
Imprint:   Serpents Tail
Country of Publication:   United Kingdom
Dimensions:   Height: 196mm,  Width: 128mm,  Spine: 34mm
Weight:   300g
ISBN:   9781846689499
ISBN 10:   184668949X
Series:   The Jay Porter mysteries by Attica Locke
Pages:   432
Publication Date:  
Audience:   General/trade ,  ELT Advanced
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active

Attica Locke's first novel Black Water Rising was shortlisted for the Orange Prize, nominated for an Edgar Award, an NAACP Image Award and a Los Angeles Times Book Prize. Her most recent book, The Cutting Season, was published in 2012 to critical acclaim. Attica is also a screenwriter and is currently a co-producer on the hit show Empire. A native of Houston, Texas, Attica lives in Los Angeles, with her husband and daughter.

Reviews for Pleasantville

It's a fascinatingly complex setting and Locke maps it with great skill, charting the struggles of her characters as the crime remains unsolved ... a smart legal thriller about how far people will go to gain power, and keep it. -- Jeff Noon * Spectator * Genuinely unnerving ... subtle, complex questions of identity, family and history * Daily Mail * This is a cinematic, panoramic view of African-American life, but it is also a sharp, tender account of Jay Porter's inner struggle ... brilliant. -- Isabel Berwick * FT * In her first three novels, Locke has explored cultural history since the days of slavery. A future book will surely deal with race in the Obama and post-Obama era. That could be her best story yet - which, on the evidence of those she has already written, is saying something. -- Mark Lawson * Guardian * An excellent thriller on one level, Locke's novel offers a beautifully detailed character in Jay Edgar Porter , a bereaved father struggling to cope with his loss. The story also has a fascinating political angle in the dirty-tricks campaign, aimed at disrupting the power of the black voting bloc and prefigures the Rove-Bush strategy in the 2000 presidential election. All told, it's gripping blend of the personal and the political. - , -- Declan Burke * Irish Times * As convincing as it is enthralling -- Boyd Hilton * Heat * To say that Locke's debut, Black Water Rising - ambitious, socially committed and beautifully written - created a stir is almost to understate the case, and one wonders if it weighed heavily on her shoulders that she would be obliged to deliver something equally impressive as a follow-up. She did just that with The Cutting Season and now we have Pleasantville ... Pleasantville is every inch as impressive as its predecessors, with a new nuance and complexity burnishing the narrative ... the next time you find yourself in the company of a crime reviewer, don't bother asking who you should be reading. You know the answer: Attica Locke. -- Barry Forshaw * Independent * A common selling point for the sorely missed HBO series The Wire is that it's the closest television has ever come to feeling like a novel. Attica Locke'sPleasantville is that novel. * Washington Independent Review of Books * In Pleasantville, Attica Locke returns to Jay Porter, the black lawyer hero of her magnificent first novel, Black Water Rising. This one is just as good. -- Marcel Berlins * Times * Outstanding...Locke just gets better and better as a writer. This is a grown-up, politically engaged novel as well as a moving portrait of a family upended by grief...a perfect read for election season -- Jake Kerridge * Sunday Express Magazine * Ambitious, assured and compelling * Hot Press * One of the Times' 'Ten best thrillers of the past ten years': Attica Locke's compassion for her characters lifts it into another class; you'll be rooting for Porter and his crew every step of the way. * Times * Fantastic... couldn't put it down -- Gary Younge * New Statesman *


  • Long-listed for Baileys Women's Prize for Fiction 2016 (UK)
  • Long-listed for CWA Gold Dagger 2015 (UK)
  • Long-listed for CWA Gold Dagger for Fiction 2015.

See Also