.com Review
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As a Harvard graduate and regular writer for the New Yorker, Edward Conlon is a little different from most
of his fellow New York City cops. And the stories he tells in his compelling memoir Blue Blood are miles away from the
commonly told Hollywood-style tales that are always action packed but rarely tethered to reality. While there is
action here, there's also political hassle, the rich and often troubling history of a department not unfamiliar with
corruption, and the day to day life of people charged with preserving order in America's largest city. Conlon's book is,
in part, a memoir as he progresses from being a rookie cop working the beat at troubled housing projects to assignments
in the narcotics division to eventually becoming a detective. But it's also the story of his family history within the
enormous NYPD as well as the evolving role of the force within the city. Conlon relates the controversies
surrounding the somewhat familiar shoo! ting of Amadou Diallou and the abuse, at the hands of New York cops, of Abner
Louima. But being a cop himself, Conlon lends in and nuance to these issues that could not possibly be found in the
newspapers. And as an outstanding writer, he draws the reader into that world. In the book's most remarkable passage,
Conlon tells of the grim but necessary work done at the Fresh Kills landfill, sifting through the rubble and remains
left in the wake of the World Trade Center attacks on 9/11 (a section originally published in The New Yorker). In many
ways, Blue Blood comes to resemble the world of New York City law that Conlon describes: both are expansive,
sprawling, multi-dimensional, and endlessly fascinating. And Conlon's writing is perfectly matched to his subject,
always lively, keenly observant, and possessing a streetwise energy. --John Moe
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From Booklist ( /gp/feature.html/?docId=1000027801 )
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*Starred Review* Over the past few years, the New Yorker has featured occasional entries from a "Cop
Diary," written by NYPD cop Conlon, under the pseudonym Marcus Laffey. These pieces sliced open a hidden world of cop
action and emotion. Perhaps the most wrenching entry was the one called "The Killing Fields," Conlon's first-person
account of working on the Fresh Kills landfill on Staten Island, where rubble and remains from 9/11 were sorted out.
This entry, along with three other New Yorker pieces, is included in this expansive warehouse of a book. The title holds
true throughout--Conlon, Jesuit-educated and a Harvard graduate, examines his family's background and the intense
fraternity of cops. The fact that this book is written by a cop still on the job gives it much more urgency and
immediacy than cop tales recollected in tranquility. And Conlon is a wonderful writer, street smart and poetic,
arresting you with his deft turn of phrase (for example, he describes the Manhattan skyline as "stately and slapdash
like the crazy geometry of rock crystal"). Rapid-fire war stories capture the mania of Conlon's life as a cop, from his
rookie days in public housing in 1995 to his current post as a detective in the South Bronx. Conlon characterizes being
a cop as gaining entry into "a drama as rich as Shakespeare." Readers are lucky Conlon gives them a pass into his world.
Connie Fletcher
Copyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved
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Review
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...Det. Ed Conlon sets the bar for the true crime procedural and the cop memoir genres impossibly,
unreachably high... -- Anthony Bourdain
...a marvelous history of the force enriched by a deeply personal account... -- Elle, April 2004
...an eloquently written piece of nonfiction that reads like a novel. -- Library Journal, starred review, April 1, 2004
...combines the efficiency of a blotter with the melancholy of a street poet. -- Details, April 2004
Blue Blood is real, authentic, true. Beautiful and inspiring, terrifying and heartbreaking. It is a great book. -- James
Frey, author of A Million Little Pieces
Blue Blood is the most stunning memoir ever written about the cop world.... You will never forget this superb book. --
Joseph Wambaugh
Crackling sharp - and utterly compelling. -- Kirkus Reviews, starred review, February 15, 2004
Growing up...my her admonished his kids to respect the . This superb book reminds us why. -- Ken Auletta
[Conlon] admits us into a fascinating and frightening world that is never far from our own doorstep. -- Bookpage, April
2004
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About the Author
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Edward Conlon is a detective with the NYPD. A graduate of Harvard University, he has published columns in
The New Yorker under the byline Marcus Laffey. He works in the Bronx.
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From The Washington Post
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With cops, it's hard to tell where the person ends and the job begins. Most off-duty officers can't shake
the hard edge of watchfulness, and one gets the feeling that they go through life dividing the good guys from the bad. A
cop, it seems, is always a cop, and outsiders shouldn't even try to understand.
In Blue Blood, his memoir of life in the New York Department, Edward Conlon would seem just the man to keep his
two worlds apart. Harvard-educated and a gifted writer, Conlon has been contributing the "Cop Diary" to the New Yorker
under the name of Marcus Laffey. But anyone expecting a neat separation between officer and writer will be disappointed.
Conlon is a cop's cop and his book, a dazzling epic of street life and rough camaraderie, is far more rewarding than any
disgruntled Serpico-style tell-all could ever be.
Conlon resisted becoming a cop, though in retrospect it seems inevitable he'd fall for the siren song of law
. His her was an FBI man; numerous uncles and family friends walked the beat. Perhaps as a type of
rebellion, Conlon became a low-grade hooligan who believed that "cops were firm and fair and mad at you, a lot of the
time, for good reason." After straightening up and completing college, he worked in a program designed to steer "good"
convicts toward the mainstream. Soon, though, he realized that this desk-bound relationship to criminals didn't offer
the thrill he craved, and he entered the academy.
In relating his life as an NYPD officer, Conlon thankfully avoids flogging broad agendas. Instead he immerses the reader
in his blue world as he ces through doors and cajoles junkies into giving up information. Although he eventually is
promoted to the rarified air of the Detective Bureau, he revels in the ground-level action of "buy and bust" narcotics
work. "When you hit a [drug deal], there is always a charge of adrenaline, arising from the jungle-war vagaries in your
knowledge of the terrain and the determination of your adversary. . . . In brief, it could be a surrender as slow and
dignified as Lee at Appomattox, or it could be bedlam, a roil of running, struggling bodies, and airborne stash." Conlon
has an ear for the cadence of the projects, and his use of slang and dialogue is masterful. He laments that he must
prettify his hard-won ghetto language to fill out a report on a drug deal, wishing instead that he could write "to wit,
defendant did possess one mad rock of yayo." The verbal sparring between partners is also well rendered, and the men
he works with -- guys with nicknames like Smacky, Pops and the Short-a-Rican -- are vibrant and hilarious.
A reader looking to criticize the culture of work would find plenty here that is offensive. But the writer is a
good and caring cop, as are the people he works with. So what if Conlon, an Irishman, and his partner Timpanaro, an
Italian, compete to see how many of their countrymen they can arrest in a good-natured game they call, with bureaucratic
perfection, "Mickstat and Wopstat." And is anyone really hurt when he describes the protracted arrest of an
uncooperative prostitute as "Operation Lying Whore"? Impolitic to be sure -- but Conlon isn't trying to win any admirers
on the civilian review board. He's just trying to be a regular cop, and an honest writer.
More important, Conlon recognizes the legitimately sensitive situations his profession forces him into. He regrets that
a serial woman-beater, for example, goes back on the street because the man is an integral part of another ongoing
investigation. When an informant offers a tip about a hidden , the money he's paid will probably go back into drugs,
and eventually toward a new . The net gain isn't quite zero, but sometimes it approaches that number, and Conlon is a
realist about his chances of staying ahead of the criminal element.
Conlon also feels real sympathy for the people he encounters. He sees a shadow of himself in a twitchy, drug-addled
informant he has cultivated, and when he writes that their meetings have "the affectionate but awkward quality of a
divorced dad picking up his kid every other weekend," the words are honest, with none of the self-conscious
big-heartedness that civil servants often profess.
If there is a drawback to this fascinating ride-along, it is that the narrative hews too closely to the trajectory of
Conlon's career. Long pages are devoted to settling scores with loathsome supervisors, and when he describes weeks spent
doing nothing more interesting than parking-lot duty at Yankee Stadium, the book drags. Still, it is reassuring to know
that the world is occasionally peaceful enough for a cop to endure maddening stretches of boredom.
The last decade must have been a confusing time to be a New York cop. The city is undoubtedly safer than it has been in
years: Gone (or at least subdued) are the fare-jumpers, the panhandlers and the dreaded squeegee men. But this
renaissance has been dogged by gripes about thuggish work and suggestions that civil liberties have suffered.
More poignantly, the ultimate sacrifice made by many of New York's finest on Sept. 11 sits awkwardly alongside the
tragic mistake that led to the death of Amadou Diallo and the depraved abuse of Abner Louima.
Blue Blood doesn't attempt to sanitize an entirely human institution. Instead, Conlon presents the truth as he has lived
it. He is no outsider casting stones, but the ultimate insider, a man so committed to his work that he takes his partner
as his roommate and chooses, for his sole off-duty pastime, to write movingly about his long days on the job.
Reviewed by Zac Unger
Copyright 2004, The Washington Post Co. All Rights Reserved.
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