The drop

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Dennis Lehane returns to the streets of his acclaimed New York Times bestsellerMystic River with The Drop

A love story wrapped in a crime story wrapped in a journey of faith

Three days after Christmas, a lonely bartender looking for a reason to live rescues an abused puppy from a trash can and meets a damaged woman looking for something to believe in. As their relationship grows, they cross paths with the Chechen mafia; a man grown dangerous with age and thwarted hopes; two hapless stick-up artists; a very curious cop; and the original owner of the puppy, who wants his dog back. . . .

The basis of the major motion picture from Fox Searchlight Pictures directed by Michal Roskam, screenplay by Dennis Lehane, and starring Tom Hardy, Noomi Rapace, and James Gandolfini.

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9780062365446
9780062369369

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Booklist Review

*Starred Review* Yes, this short novel is technically a ­novelization it's adapted from Lehane's screenplay for a movie of the same name, which itself was adapted from Lehane's short story Animal Rescue but don't let the book's mixed parentage get in the way. This is a tight, gritty little tale of working-class crime in Boston, reminiscent not only of Lehane's earlier crime fiction, but also of the work of the great George V. Higgins. Bob Saginowski is a lonely bartender working at a tired watering hole called Cousin Marv's working for Cousin Marv himself, in fact, who is Bob's actual cousin. The sleepy joint, home to a motley crew of beer-soaked regulars, serves as a drop bar through which Chechen gangsters continually move thousands of ill-gotten dollars. Until one night when a couple of hapless stickup men, who seemingly wandered in from an Elmore Leonard novel, steal the loot, leaving Cousin Marv and, by extension, bartender Bob in a pickle with the Chechens. Meanwhile, Bob rescues an abandoned dog, meets a girl who knows dogs, tangles with another lowlife claiming to be the dog's owner, and finds himself feeling oddly determined to overcome 20 years of lethargy. Like both Higgins and Leonard, Lehane breathes pulsing life into his story through the small details of his stoop-shouldered characters' lives, investing their every mannerism with unspoken emotion and the weight of too many bad decisions, all of which makes Bob's transformation from quiet desperation to quiet determination a powerful kind of existential drama. And there's a dog, too! HIGH-DEMAND BACKSTORY: Expect the movie version to draw readers to this streetwise story, which marks Lehane's return from broad-canvas historical fiction to the close quarters of Boston's mean streets.--Ott, Bill Copyright 2014 Booklist

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
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Publisher's Weekly Review

This gritty gem from Lehane (Mystic River) has a curious origin. The short story "Animal Rescue," which appeared in 2009's Boston Noir, was the basis for the screenplay of the soon-to-be-released film The Drop, to which this is the tie-in. Boston bartender Bob Saginowski pulls a beaten pup from a winter trash can, a small good deed with large consequences. The rescue leads Bob to Nadia Dunn, who helps him take care of the dog, and also to crazy Eric Deeds, who claims the dog is his. While Bob tries to fend off Deeds, his cousin Marv, onetime owner of Cousin Marv's bar, contends with money issues and pride and the Chechens, who now own his bar and use it as a money drop. A parade of weary, quirky characters-thieves, thugs, and hard guys-will resonate with Lehane fans. Amid his struggles, Bob establishes a tenuous relationship with Nadia, and finally takes a stand in this stark and moving short novel. Agent: Ann Rittenberg, Ann Rittenberg Literary. (Sept.) (c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
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Library Journal Review

Two days after Christmas, as Bob Saginowski is walking home from his late-night shift at Cousin Marv's Bar, he hears whimpering emanating from a garbage can. He finds under the debris, a bleeding, beaten puppy. Nadia, the occupant of a nearby house, offers to help clean up the canine, ultimately named Rocco after the patron saint of dogs. Both lonely, Nadia and Bob soon form a relationship. When the bar, previously owned by Bob's cousin Marv but now owned by Chechen mobsters and used as a drop for mob cash, is robbed the following night, the Chechens strongly advise Marv and Bob to recover the money or suffer serious consequences. To make matters worse for Bob, the dog's psychotic previous owner, Eric, wants it back and threatens Bob, Nadia, and Rocco. It is the relationship among all these characters that drives the plot. Verdict This expansion of the disjointed Lehane story "Animal Rescue," which was anthologized in Boston Noir, is a disjointed novel. The characters, all harboring deep, dark secrets and desires, are not overly interesting. The predictable plot and ending contain little "noir" and less suspense. This is for stalwart Lehane fans only, although there might be additional interest owing to the September release of the film adaptation staring Tom Hardy, the late James Gandolfini, and Noomi Rapace, with the screenplay by Lehane (youtu.be/Iy_ogNiryZ8). [One of Barbara Hoffert's "Books That Buzzed at the American Library Conference in Las Vegas," 7/7/14; ow.ly/A4dm8.-Ed.]-Edward Goldberg, Syosset P.L., NY (c) Copyright 2014. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

(c) Copyright Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
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Kirkus Book Review

The bard of blue-collar Boston crime returns with a sleight-of-hand novel tinged with sin and redemption. The latest from Lehane (Live by Night, 2012, etc.) is a novel with an unusual genesis, and it's shorter and less intricate than usual. It began when he was asked to adapt one of his short stories ("Animal Rescue") for a movie. Though his novels have seen success on the big screen, this was his screenwriting debut, and it preceded the writing of this book, which might be dismissed, in lesser hands, as a "novelization" of the film. It's richer than a mere re-creation of a movie on the page because the author gets inside the heads and thoughts of his characters in a way that a movie generally can't. And this particular perspective is crucial when it comes to protagonist Bob, a keep-to-himself bartender who works for Cousin Marv. Both men, like pretty much every man in their neighborhood, have some sort of shady past, but the two have apparently gone comparatively straight. Yet Cousin Marv's bar remains used by the Chechen mobsters who own it as a money drop for transferring funds. Such is the backdrop for what appears to be the main plot, in which lonesome, loveless Bob finds a beaten puppy in a trash can and is persuaded by a woman who witnesses the incident (and who has her own questionable past) to take it home. Since "all he wanted was to not be alone," the connection with both the dog and the woman proves so transforming that he "suspected they might have been brought together by something other than chance." But there's another connection, a crazy thug and rumored killer who claims that both the dog and the woman are his. As the novel progresses, every character has secrets and revelationsexcept maybe Rocco, the dogas the plot pivots in some surprising directions. Even one of the novelist's lesser efforts has the signature style, edge and heart to delight fans. Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.
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