Shining City: A Novel
Shining City: A Novel book cover

Shining City: A Novel

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$18.99
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Ecco
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From the Inside Flap Peter Rena is a "fixer." He and his partner, Randi Brooks, earn their living making the problems of the powerful disappear. They get their biggest job yet when the White House hires them to vet the president's nominee for the Supreme Court. Judge Roland Madison is a legal giant, but he's a political maverick, with views that might make the already tricky confirmation process even more difficult. Rena and his team go full bore to cover every inch of the judge's past, while the competing factions of Washington, D.C., mobilize with frightening intensity: ambitious senators, garrulous journalists, and wily power players on both sides of the aisle. All of that becomes background when a string of seemingly random killings overlaps with Rena's investigation, with Judge Madison a possible target. Racing against the clock to keep his nominee safe, the president satisfied, and the political wolves at bay, Rena learns just how dangerous Washington's obsession with power--how to get it and how to keep it--can be. Written with razor-sharp political insight and heart- pounding action, Shining City is a hugely impressive debut that announces a major new talent. --Dallas Morning News --This text refers to an alternate kindle_edition edition. Tom Rosenstiel is the author of eleven books, four of which are novels. His nonfiction is focused on politics and media, and he is recognized as one of the leading thinkers in the country in the future of media. His book The Elements of Journalism , now in its fourth edition, has been translated into more than 25 languages. Tom is the Eleanor Merrill Visiting Professor on the future of Journalism at the University of Maryland’s Philip Merrill College of Journalism and a senior fellow at the Brookings Institution. He formerly was the executive director of the American Press Institute and the founder and director of the media research unit at Pew Research Center, which he directed for 16 years. He was the press critic of the Los Angeles Times for a decade and is a non-resident senior fellow at the Brookings Institution in Washington. He lives in Chevy Chase Maryland with his wife, Rima. --This text refers to the paperback edition. Peter Rena is a “fixer.” He and his partner, Randi Brooks, get their biggest job yet when the White House hires them to vet the president’s nominee for the Supreme Court. Judge Roland Madison is a legal giant, but he’s a political maverick, with views that might make the already tricky confirmation process even more difficult. All of that becomes background when a string of seemingly random killings overlaps with Rena’s investigation, with Judge Madison a possible target. Racing against the clock to keep his nominee safe, the president satisfied, and the political wolves at bay, Rena learns that Washington’s obsession with power—how to get it and how to keep it—is a dangerous game. --This text refers to the paperback edition. “Skillful and memorable. . . . ‘Shining City’ has the excitement of a courtroom thriller [and] of a police procedural. . . . Its hero’s ruminations on politics as the art of the possible give readers much to ponder.” -- Wall Street Journal“One of the smartest thrillers in recent memory. . . . With its slam-bang pace, richly drawn characters and intricate examination of political skullduggery, Shining City is more than a thrilling adventure - it’s a hard look at how and why Washington so often falls short of its hilltop ideal.” -- Dallas Morning News“[A] smart new political thriller. . . . Rosenstiel writes well, sometimes even beautifully. . . . In an era of alternative facts, when notions of verifiable truth are under assault, [Shining City] reads like something that should be chipped into stone somewhere in Washington.” -- The Boston Globe“[Rosenstiel’s] experience in Washington helps create a very realistic, though often cynical, view of what Washington is like. Perhaps the best measure of his first novel is that it will leave many readers eager to see what comes next.” -- Associated Press“Rosenstiel’s insights on DC are spot on, told with a reporter’s sparing prose.” -- Los Angeles Review of Books“Veteran journalist Rosenstiel’s debut novel ‘shines’ with page-turning intensity that will make readers hope that this book is the beginning of a new series. Highly recommended for legal and political thriller junkies and fans of David Baldacci and John Grisham.” -- Library Journal, Starred Review“A roof-rattling thriller. . . . What’s really fun is watching [Rosenstiel] drop insights about the Kabuki world of the nation’s capital. . . . Give this one to fans of the late, great Ross Thomas.” -- Booklist“[A] polished, entertaining political thriller. . . . Rosenstiel does a brilliant job dramatizing how Washington’s political sausage is made. . . . Readers will want to see a lot more of Rena and Brooks.” -- Publishers Weekly“Shining City is an amazing novel full of insider knowledge and insights. Combine that with a plot that pulses with the momentum of an edge-of-your-seat thriller and Tom Rosenstiel delivers a debut that will be remembered for years.” -- Michael Connelly“I loved Shining City and will share with DC insiders and friends far away from the Beltway.” -- Nicolle Wallace, former White House communications director and author of Madam President“Shining City is a smart, timely thriller that sends chills up your spine while capturing the verisimilitude of a ripped-from-the-headlines Supreme Court nomination process. Tom Rosenstiel is a writer to watch.” -- Alafair Burke, author of The Ex“At once gripping, cerebral, and eerily prescient, Tom Rosenstiel’s Shining City illuminates the darkest recesses of D.C.’s corridors of power. Rosenstiel’s political machinations ring so true, you’ll wonder if he has the White House wired for sound.” -- Chris Holm, author of The Killing Kind“If they’d asked John Grisham to pen a season of House of Cards (not a bad idea, by the way), it would play like Shining City . Tough, smart, nuanced and with a hammer pace, Rosenstiel’s debut offers an insider’s tour of the puzzle palace that is Washington D.C.” -- Michael Harvey, author of Brighton“ Shining City couldn’t possibly be any more timely. Rosenstiel takes us behind the headlines as only as insider can with this first-rate tale of political intrigue and maneuvering. It’s so packed with authentic Washington detail you can almost feel the humidity.” -- Matthew Quirk, author of The 500 and Cold Barrel Zero“Tom Rosenstiel takes readers behind the clichés and curtains of Washington power politics . . . This is a fascinating novel about how justice is shaped in the United States that couldn’t be more timely.” -- James Grady, author of Six Days of the Condor and Last Days of the Condor --This text refers to the paperback edition. Read more

Features & Highlights

  • NPR Best Book of 2017
  • A polished and gripping political debut that Michael Connelly calls “an edge of your seat thriller,” Shining City is set in DC amid a harrowing Supreme Court nomination fight.
  • “Amazing. . . . Pulses with momentum. . . . A debut that will be remembered for years.” —Michael Connelly
  • Peter Rena is a “fixer.” He and his partner, Randi Brooks, earn their living making the problems of the powerful disappear. They get their biggest job yet when the White House hires them to vet the president’s nominee for the Supreme Court. Judge Roland Madison is a legal giant, but he’s a political maverick, with views that might make the already tricky confirmation process even more difficult. Rena and his team go full-bore to cover every inch of the judge’s past, while the competing factions of Washington D.C. mobilize with frightening intensity: ambitious senators, garrulous journalists, and wily power players on both sides of the aisle.
  • All of that becomes background when a string of seemingly random killings overlaps with Rena’s investigation, with Judge Madison a possible target. Racing against the clock to keep his nominee safe, the President satisfied, and the political wolves at bay, Rena learns just how dangerous Washington’s obsession with power—how to get it and how to keep it—can be.Written with razor-sharp political insight and heart-pounding action,
  • Shining City
  • is a hugely impressive debut that announces a major new talent.

Customer Reviews

Rating Breakdown

★★★★★
30%
(455)
★★★★
25%
(379)
★★★
15%
(228)
★★
7%
(106)
23%
(349)

Most Helpful Reviews

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I know it's fiction but...

It would be hard to orchestrate better timing for a page-turning novel about the investigation of a Supreme Court nominee. I picked up Shining City because I was intrigued about the concept of a "fixer" hired by the president to get his nominee through the vetting process and onto the high court. The author has very cleverly created a couple of characters (one a highly competent investigator and the other an equally talented attorney) who I can easily see in an entire series of novels and/or movies down the road. They make a great team and had me wondering the whole time--are there really firms like this in DC who specialize in shadowy operations such as helping a president get his pick approved?

Perhaps what I found most entertaining about Shining City was the way the writer weaves in two seemingly unconnected stories. We have the quest to get a Supreme Court nominee approved and then there is a murder...and then another...and another. Since they don't take place in D.C. and nothing about them seems at all connected, well...let's just say the writing is top notch and exactly the kind of novel I was looking for when I packed it for a recent vacation.

According to Amazon, the author (Tom Rosenstiel) is an ex-reporter who has written several non-fiction books about journalism. No mystery there. The real question is: Why has it taken this long to see a thoroughly entertaining novel from a writer who sat on the sidelines way too long?
20 people found this helpful
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Flat, predictable, and downright dull

There is a great literary tradition of wonderful political thrillers set in Washington, DC. This is not one of them. In fact, I'm a little flummoxed as to how it is even possible to write a book about a Supreme Court nomination flight and for it to end up being this dull and lack any sense at all of the endlessly fascinating city in which the fight occurs. There is simply no atmosphere in the prose at all. If it weren't for the place names sprinkled here and there like salt, this book could just as easily have been set in San Diego. Not recommended. Really.
14 people found this helpful
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Excellent political fiction (or is it fiction?)

It has to be difficult making the transition from writing non-fiction tp penning fiction. But Tom Rosenstiel has cleared that hurdle, with his first novel, “Shining City.”

As a former teacher of college journalists, my recommended reading list always included the books he wrote (most co-authored with Bill Kovach) and especially “The Elements of Journalism.” The book has become a must-read for both aspiring future political reporters and “old-timers,” who struggle to hold onto the news values described in “Elements.”

After a long career as a political writer, as well as a media critic, Rosenstiel is superbly equipped with insights that allowed him to develop a realistic cast of characters for “Shining City,” which begins with the death of a Supreme Court Justice and takes us through the nomination of a replacement. Spoiler alert: There’s a little serial murder along the way.

I especially appreciated, in his character development, how he accomplished nuanced peering into the psyches of the elected officials, lobbyists and journalists who populate these 68.3 square miles surrounded by reality where I’ve lived for four decades, Washington, DC. It's hard for me to read my own mind, let alone those of others. Of course, in his reporting career Rosenstiel had to size-up the motivations of countless sources, so I guess that helped.

I think my favorite line is near the beginning of Chapter 45 (page 279 in my hardback edition), referencing a delay in a speech supportive of President Nash’s nominee, Judge Madison, by a member of the Senate Judiciary Committee: "Without that, the other Democrats would be putting drywall up without a frame." Where did that come from, I asked myself? Maybe Rosenstiel was having his house renovated when he got to that point in the book? Great metaphor.

I had a small problem following the identity of some of the more minor characters, especially on second or third reference, when I probably had failed to pay enough attention to the initial description. But I realize it must be a challenge to find a way to remind the reader, without seeming to be redundant.

On a scale of one-to-ten, this first novel gets an easy nine. I’m looking forward to Rosenstiel’s next book and the game many of us long-time Washingtonians found ourselves playing with “Shining City,” trying to guess the real-life characters who make appearances in the book under other names (to protect the guilty?)

One last thought comes to mind. In a media culture that has devolved to fake news and alternative facts, it may become harder and harder to employ the labels “fiction” and “non-fiction.” So here’s hoping Rosenstiel doesn’t give up his day job as director of the American Press Institute, where he continues to perform a public service as a media ethics-and-practice guru.
14 people found this helpful
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Combo Washington Insider/Crime procedural

Tom Rosenstiel’s “Shining City” (the title is from Ronald Reagan’s “Shining City on a Hill” speech) is at its best when it describes the political maneuvering that goes on behind the scenes at Supreme Court nominations. The author is a Washington veteran, as he shows well here.

Less convincing, however, is the B story, which concerns a serial killer. That seemed out of the author’s expertise entirely. It’s as if he patched it together from Jeffery Deaver’s novels and CBS TV police procedurals.

But it’ll keep you reading, and keep you trying to figure out who all the fictional characters are based on. (Ted Cruz is there, very thinly disguised.)

The two main characters, Randi Brooks and Peter Rena, are a strange pair (she, a Democrat with a law degree; he GOP and ex-military) who run a consulting firm that solves problems for politicians and, among others, owners of sports teams with players who stray. (The author throws in one of those “before the opening credits” scenes to show you what their normal jobs are.)

The president calls them in to “scrub” the qualifications of a supreme court nominee, Judge Madison of California, and as they investigate his background we begin to see how the B story is connected to the A story. During the investigation we meet a large array of characters--staff members who work for Rena and Brooks: Senators; journalists; lawyers; smoke-eyed judge's daughter. Indeed there are so many characters that when the final loose thread is tied up in the last chapter I had long forgotten who that person was. Too bad a list of characters wasn’t included.

NOTES AND ASIDES: Graphic violence; ungraphic sex; lucid prose
6 people found this helpful
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Slow

Too many characters and too many names to remember. It was just boring. There were hints of a romance but it was never developed.
5 people found this helpful
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Not for me

Too many characters, couldn't keep up with who was who. Only read about 100 pages or so and simply could not get into the story, Did not finish,
4 people found this helpful
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Ultimately disappointing

I was ready to forget the slow pace, the amount of ultimately irrelevant details because there was something gripping in that story and in the hero's relentless pursuit of the truth. But what I cannot accept is the lack of an ending on at least three issues. Are we being kept in suspense for a sequel?
3 people found this helpful
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Overall captivating

Quick and engulfing read even if not totally unanticipated. Several typos and grammatical errors that are irritating. The last third seemed a bit rushed.
3 people found this helpful
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Shining City, Tom Rosenstiel

Shining City, Tom Rosenstiel

Some authors might have shrugged and switched plotlines last year when Congress refused to consider Barack Obama’s Supreme Court nominee to replace Antonin Scalia. Why bother with a story outdated -- or upstaged -- by the news?
Instead, journalist Tom Rosenstiel persisted and has crafted one of the best political novels since Advise and Consent, the 1959 Pulitzer-Prize winning book by The New York Times reporter Allen Drury.
Shining City heads straight into the dizzying political labyrinth (now revived) that surrounds the process of persuading Congress to accept a President’s nominee to the Supreme Court.
The tale takes fascinating twists. A Democratic President picks a scholarly Republican with a maverick streak of independence and a rascal’s willingness to dash hopes for a smooth consensus.
“You know that the process is a sham, don’t you?” says the nominee, Federal Appeals Court Judge Edward Roland Madison of Marin County. His stark appraisal rings true.
“’The senators ask questions to curry favor with interest groups. The nominees score points by not actually answering them. No one learns anything. It’s become a disappointing, meaningless ritual. Surviving it says nothing about whether someone would be a thoughtful constitutional jurist,’”
Among key characters, a team of savvy consultants led by political opposites Peter Rena (his observations lead the narrative) and Randi Brooks, do the vetting, advising and steering of the President’s nominee.
Along the way, Rosenstiel salts the tale with pitch-perfect descriptions of the inner thoughts and worries of modern day political operatives in a capital where relationships are in constant turmoil.
One of the reviewer’s favorite characters is Matt Alabama, a network television reporter and friend of Rena since Rena’s days on a Senator’s staff.
“’You watch my piece?’” Alabama asks. He must feel insecure about his story on (Supreme Court Justice) Hoffman’s funeral, Rena thinks.
“For all his accomplishments, Alabama still agonizes over every story. He feels a sense of responsibility, a desire to do justice to what he covers. It was one reason he hadn’t been jettisoned as network news shrank, became sillier, and then as all of journalism imploded.”
Rosenstiel dramatizes a serial killer’s menacing presence and impact in a way that would be criminal to reveal in a review. Suffice to say that it rises to the clever, chilling, tick-tock descriptions of our best modern mystery stories.
Shining City delivers a double bonus, the political awareness we associate with Allen Drury and the kind of dazzling crime procedural we expected from Robert B. Parker. -- John Martin
2 people found this helpful
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Great fun and worth the read

I love politics and I love mysteries. "Shining City" is the perfect blend of both. I don't often have the time to read novel. But I took my time with this book because it is full of gems of great writing. I know. Because I'm a writer too.
2 people found this helpful