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And then Ellroy decided to widen his scope yet again. White Jazz, the last of the quartet, marked a stylistic breakthrough of sorts. Written in a sort of angry shorthand, White Jazz fragmented experience and description so severely as to suggest a hard-boiled Céline, hurrying to scribble down the barest fragments of what was happening around him before the perpetrators vanished. Walking right along the line of self-parody ("The job: Take down a bookie mill, let the press in--get some ink to compete with the fight probe," the novel begins), this new-model prose aims to present absolutely everything with a rush of immediacy, a jangly buzz that captures the briskness of cop talk and soldier talk without stopping for feelings, explanation, or charity. You may have to read his flashbulb paragraphs several times before the shards of detail cohere into anything meaningful.
Following American Tabloid--the story of the Kennedy assassination--Ellroy's new sequel, The Cold Six Thousand (Knopf), tightens his prose even further, banishing almost every adverb and adjective in its rush to tell. "Bob extolled Vietnam nonstop. It was hot. It was groovy. It was Cuba on Meth," goes one entirely typical paragraph. Unsurprisingly, his take on Sixties America pretty much recalls his take on Forties and Fifties L.A. Picking up his story just after the murder in Dallas, Ellroy hits upon every fringe/underground activity you'd imagine: Far-right wackos churn out anti-Communist and anti-integration tracts; Howard Hughes mainlines Mormon blood to stay alive; J. Edgar Hoover connives to get JFK and RFK out of the way, not to mention MLK; Cubans scheme to topple Fidel and get their homeland back; the U.S. government has its paws all over everything; and what about this little country in Southeast Asia?
In telling this story, Ellroy follows his trio of little guys, each of them compromised in his own host of ways. (You'll need a three-dimensional flowchart to keep track of the shifting allegiances not just of each major character, but of the minor ones as well.) Ward Littell, a onetime Jesuit, worked for the FBI before becoming a mob lawyer, but then Hoover wooed him back after Bobby Kennedy denied him a job. We first see him heading to Dallas to cover up the bureau's tracks in the JFK hit ("Do you think the single-gunman consensus will hold?" Hoover asks him. "I'll do everything I can to ensure it," he promises). After this, Littell multitasks, simultaneously working for the FBI, Hughes, and organized crime while also siphoning off profits to help King's civil-rights crusade.
Pete Bondurant began as Hughes's bodyguard before contracting out to Jimmy Hoffa, the CIA, and drug dealers. He will later lead raids on Cuba, whack a bunch of guys who deserve it, and organize male-prostitution, drug, and celebrity-dirt rings from a cab stand in Vegas. (He is, sort of, the hero.) And so on.