<p/><br></br><p><b> Book Synopsis </b></p></br></br><p><strong><em>New York Times</em> bestselling author Dennis Lehane's <em>World Gone By </em>continues the epic story of Joe Coughlin from <em>The Given Day </em>and <em>Live by Night</em> through World War II, as he struggles to navigate the criminal underworld between Cuba and Florida.</strong></p><p><strong>"Suspenseful, devious, well-constructed and as filled with ethical questions as it is with gangsters." --<em>New York Times</em></strong></p><p>Ten years have passed since Joe Coughlin's enemies killed his wife and destroyed his empire, and much has changed. Prohibition is dead, the world is at war again, and Joe's son, Tomás, is growing up. Now the former crime kingpin works as a consigliore to the Bartolo crime family, traveling between Tampa and Cuba, his wife's homeland.</p><p>A master who moves in and out of the black, white, and Cuban underworlds, Joe effortlessly mixes with Tampa's social elite, U.S. Naval intelligence, the Lansky-Luciano mob, and the mob-financed government of Fulgencio Batista. He has everything--money, power, a beautiful mistress, and anonymity.</p><p>But success cannot protect him from the dark truth of his past--and ultimately, the wages of a lifetime of sin will finally be paid in full.</p><p>Dennis Lehane vividly recreates the rise of the mob during a world at war, from a masterfully choreographed Ash Wednesday gun battle in the streets of Ybor City to a chilling, heartbreaking climax in a Cuban sugar cane field. Told with verve and skill, <em>World Gone By</em> is a stunning work of historical fiction from one of "the most interesting and accomplished American novelists" (<em>Washington Post</em>).</p><p/><br></br><p><b> From the Back Cover </b></p></br></br><p>"Lehane writes convincingly, tensely . . . powerfully."--<em>USA Today</em></p><p>Late spring, 1943. The world is at war but the American mob is in its heyday. Former crime boss Joe Coughlin now works as a consigliere to the infamous Bartolo Crime Family, effortlessly handling their interests in Tampa, Boston, and Cuba. In the decade since he lost his wife in a cascade of bullets, Joe has made a home for himself and his son, and once again forged everything out of nothing: money, power, a relationship with a beautiful woman, and a privileged place in Tampa's shadowy underworld.</p><p>But a rumor surfaces that someone wants Joe dead. And he has only days to figure out who, or he will die. And then there's the ghost--a young boy who appears on the fringes of Joe's vision and seems to be trying to tell him something. Racing against time and fate, Joe hurtles through a violent yet intoxicating world on the brink of total collapse or epic triumph, a world on the cusp of reinvention and rebirth--where the old codes, the old sins, and the old dreams may soon be swept away once and for all.</p><p>"The novel's plot is as complex as its morality."--<em>Daily News</em> (New York)</p><p>"Lehane has Elmore Leonard's ear for dialogue."--<em>Miami Herald</em></p><p/><br></br><p><b> Review Quotes </b></p></br></br><br>"A textbook guide on how to end a series ."--<em>Associated Press</em><br><br>"Lehane has Elmore Leonard's ear for dialogue and a masterly touch with description... <em>World Gone By </em>offers a frisson like you get from the best gangster sagas from <em>The Godfather </em>to <em>The Sopranos </em>-- entry into a world of complex characters who are operating within their highly risky world. And it serves a plot that drives relentlessly forward without ever feeling forced."--<em>Miami Herald</em><br><br>"Lehane is shaping a tragedy in <em>World Gone By</em>, along classic lines set in a seamy underbelly. The novel's plot is as complex as its morality while both are fueled by searing betrayals."--New York Daily News<br><br>"Lehane writes convincingly, tensely, tersely, powerfully, about the fatal tensions of daily Mob life without romanticizing it, without judging it. He steers the plot and its characters toward inevitable consequences. Everyone here is bloodied--splattered with either their own or someone else's blood...This gangster novel is violent, graphic and guiltily compelling." --<em>USA Today</em><br><br>"Lehane [is] a novelist of...effortless power."--<em>Chicago Tribune</em><br><br>"Lehane, who has developed into a novelist of seemingly effortless power and command, is missing nothing in his delivery. Few writers can equal his ability to balance dark and light, casual and intense, here and then. More than a sequel, <em>World Gone By </em>seems lit by its predecessor and the events of the past as if through a prism--or maybe a black light. In the process, Joe Coughlin's story becomes more epic still." --<em>Chicago Tribune</em><br><br>"Lehane's prose is muscular and lean, elegant and brutal, and his action scenes are cause to sit back and exhale when they're over...<em>World Gone By </em>is a poetic conclusion to an accomplished American crime story."--<em>Milwaukee Journal Sentinel</em><br><br>"Lehane's 12th novel is a classic gangster epic."--<em>Tampa Bay Times</em><br>
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