
Blood on the Moon
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Narrated by:
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L. J. Ganser
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By:
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James Ellroy
Detective Sergeant Lloyd Hopkins can't stand music, or any loud sounds. He's got a beautiful wife, but he can't get enough of other women. And instead of bedtime stories, he regales his daughters with bloody crime stories. He's a thinking man's cop with a dark past and an obsessive drive to hunt down monsters who prey on the innocent.
Now, there's something haunting him. He sees a connection in a series of increasingly gruesome murders of women committed over a period of 20 years. To solve the case, Hopkins will dump all the rules and risk his career to make the final link and get the killer.
©1984 James Ellroy (P)2010 Audio GoListeners also enjoyed...




















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Where does Blood on the Moon rank among all the audiobooks you’ve listened to so far?
Probably in the middle. It wasn't the best but certainly wasn't the worst.What did you like best about this story?
The twists and turns. At times they were hard to follow, but added to a good tale.What does L. J. Ganser bring to the story that you wouldn’t experience if you just read the book?
He made the story. Without his narrative I don't believe I would have finished the story.Was there a moment in the book that particularly moved you?
When the past of the hero was finally revealed.A VERY CONVOLUTED STORY
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so so...
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Avoid if you’re offended by slurs
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It’s important to keep this in mind as the reader, his books of that time are time capsules. People acted and talked very different from today. Heroes said what we today call terrible things. Wives put their husbands on pedestals. Crime was rampant and gritty. LAPD was brutally aggressive and hands on with people. Racism was tolerated, as was homophobia. Morals however were higher and there was a clear line in the sand between wrong and right. This all sounds like an oxymoron, and it is. But it’s the past. The past is NOT subjective. It’s important to know where we’ve come from to avoid future mistakes. Many surprised readers were turned off by the racial language, sexual assaults and violence within his books. However this writing must be interpreted in context. As previously written, anything after the 1940’s are not included in his crime novels set in the 1940’s.
Even Stephen King for the most part adds racial language and homophobia to his novels taking place in X time for realistic purposes.
Blood on the Moon is a visceral story about a young LA Police officer during circa 1940’s. Married with a daughter, he lives for being the best cop he can be and lives his job. He believes himself the first line of defense between innocents and depraved lunatics.
He has extramarital affairs, drinks too much coffee and hunts down criminals, both civilians and other cops with old fashioned police work.
Enter the depraved lunatic. We are given glimpses for why he does what he does and a front seat into his bloody hobby. There are many other interesting characters in this novel who either are there to push the story forward or just there. Same as life’s experience of the day to day interacting with others around us.
Mr. Elroy’s writing is poetic, violent, funny and heartbreaking. I would encourage anyone who’s interested in a crime novel of this time period to give it a listen.
Great Story by a Great Man
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It was certainly a change of pace to have a protagonist who is only deeply conflicted in one or two ways, and to have a plot with no twists to speak of. But some details and plot contrivances were hard to take. I'm used to being baffled at the end of an Ellroy novel, but not the way this one left me.
LJ Ganser did a serviceable job with the text he had to work with, and the book still propels you forward, even if it doesn't end up going much of anywhere.
I hope the other two books of the Loyd Hopkins trilogy are better than this one, but I imagine I'll finish them within the week, regardless (I already changed my mind about taking a break, god help me.)
Good, not great, kind of stupid
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Excellent
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- James Ellroy, Blood on the Moon
The first book in a trilogy of books (the L.A. Noir or Lloyd Hopkins Trilogy) that predate the Ellroy genius that is the The L.A. Quartet (The Black Dahlia, The Big Nowhere, L.A. Confidential, and White Jazz) and the Underworld USA Trilogy (American Tabloid, The Cold Six Thousand, Blood's a Rover).
'Blood on the Moon' has many of the elements that will be repeated in most of his later cop novels (especially those in LA Quartet): idealized women, mothers, sexual obsession, dark history, inner demons, etc. This isn't nearly as good as the best of the LA Quartet, but not bad. It is like discovering a wet moth just after it has climbed out of its cocoon. It is early, imperfect, but contains a lot of creepy potential.
If you are new to Ellroy, don't start here. If you are already an Ellroy fan, this is still worth the time.
Looking for new answers
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It’s hard hitting…
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A master of crime
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good story, not for everyone
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