Tin Badges: A Novel (Tank Rizzo)
Tin Badges: A Novel (Tank Rizzo) book cover

Tin Badges: A Novel (Tank Rizzo)

Hardcover – August 27, 2019

Price
$8.57
Format
Hardcover
Pages
304
Publisher
Ballantine Books
Publication Date
ISBN-13
978-0345483928
Dimensions
6.39 x 1.06 x 9.52 inches
Weight
1.14 pounds

Description

Advance praise for Tin Badges “Carcaterraxa0capably combines his trademark adrenaline-fueled action with the emotion involved in Tank taking on a parental rolexa0for a sometimes surly teen.xa0All this needs, after a cliff-hanger close,xa0is a sequel, and, fortunately, one is promised.” — Booklist “ Tin Badges is pure platinum. Action fans will love the complex move/countermove battle between retired NYPD detective Tank Rizzo’s colorful crew of societal misfits and a vicious drug dealer and the corrupt cops who protect him, but Carcaterra digs deeper, rendering a soulful meditation on the things that make the life-and-death struggle worth the risk—family, honor, loyalty, and sacrifice. Tin Badges shines brilliantly.” —John Clarkson, author of Among Thieves and Bronx Requiem Lorenzo Carcaterra is the #1 New York Times bestselling author of A Safe Place , Sleepers , Apaches , Gangster , Street Boys , Paradise City , Chasers , Midnight Angels , and The Wolf . He is a former writer/producer for Law & Order and has written for National Geographic Traveler , The New York Times Magazine , and Maxim . He lives in New York City and is at work on his next novel. Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved. 1.ManhattanAugust 2015I hate last days of pretty much anything you can think of—xadfrom vacations to the end of baseball season to the final time I’ll be able to share a laugh with someone I love. Some last days you can prepare for, knowing there will be the start of another cycle waiting with the flicker of a few months off the calendar. And then there are those days that hit hard enough to send the strongest of us cowering for cover.That’s what my last working day as a New York City Police Department first-xadgrade detective was like for me. Going in, it never entered my mind my career would end before my shift was through. But I imagine no one ever knows when it’s their last day of doing anything. Especially not in my line of work.The day began with my usual routine—xada two-xadhour workout, a cold shower, and two double espressos sipped slowly while I scanned the morning tabloids and overnight police reports. By and large I am a creature of my habits, good ones for the most part, though now and then I’ll slip and spend more than I should on a great bottle of wine or play a few more hands of poker despite knowing the cold streak I had been running all night was never destined to warm up.By 8:00 a.m., I sat on the front steps of my Greenwich Village brownstone, waiting for my partner, Frank “Pearl” Monroe, to drive up. The early-xadmorning sun warmed my face, and it was already starting to feel like one of those New York City August days when the heat-xadand-xadhumidity combo clouded your vision and made you long for a bitter blast of winter.By the way, in the event you’re wondering how a gold-xadshield NYPD salary is enough to land a guy a Greenwich Village brownstone, let me set you straight—xadit isn’t. Not even close to it. My cop salary wouldn’t cover the monthly expenses. In my case, you can chalk it up to a little bit of luck and a father with a nose for real estate.“When you go looking for a house,” my dad would tell anyone within earshot, “always move toward the cheapest home in the best neighborhood. That’s how you end up with a winner.”My father worked as a lugger down at the old 14th Street meat market. He had been a boxer in his younger days, rising up as far as the number-xadthree contender for the middleweight title. A broken right hand and a damaged left eardrum forced him to give up any dreams of being a champion. So instead he got up each morning at 2:00 a.m., regardless of weather, put on his white butcher’s smock, and walked to the meat market, which by 3:00 a.m. was lit by floodlights, truck headlights, and wood-xadburning fires from rusty iron barrels as workers from more than two dozen companies loaded up freezer shipments to be delivered to restaurants throughout the city. This was decades before the area became the super-xadchic neighborhood it is today, filled with high-xadend boutiques, expensive restaurants, and monthly rents that make your legs buckle.My father made good workingman’s money, some weeks clearing as much as five hundred dollars when overtime was heavy, and my mom was even better at socking it away. Back then, in the early 1980s, people like my folks could afford to buy themselves a brownstone in the Village, if they played it right, which my parents did and then some.The brownstone is a four-xadstory walk-xadup, and for twenty years my aunt Nancy and uncle Aldo rented the top two floors while me, my brother, Jack, and my folks lived in the bottom two. The mortgage got knocked off years ago, and today I still live in those same bottom two floors and rent out the top ones to a retired shoemaker and his wife, still working part-xadtime at a local bakery. I charge them what they can afford. I’d much rather have quiet and steady neighbors than ones with deeper pockets and friends always in need of a place to crash.The brownstone has been my home for as long as I can remember, and I imagine it will be until my final days.My partner, Pearl, pulled up to the curb, his late-xadmodel fire-xadred Mustang as shiny as his shaved head. He had a wide smile on his handsome face, Sam Cooke’s smooth, sweet voice belting out through the four speakers. I moved from the stoop and slid into the front seat, and before I had my seatbelt latched Pearl had the Mustang gliding halfway down the street. “We still a go?” I asked.“Checked in with my guy before the sun came up,” Pearl said. “If there’s a deal going down, then today’s the day for it.”“I’d still feel a lot better if we had one of our sources vouch for the guy,” I said.“You worried about him because he’s a user?” Pearl asked.“There’s that,” I said, nodding. “Plus, he’s looking to slice considerable time off a jolt that’s sure to land him a serious upstate stretch. Under those conditions, a guy like him will say and do anything to get that sentence reduced.”“I ran his priors,” Pearl said, swinging the Mustang toward Sixth Avenue, heading uptown. “Every stretch he did, he did for a job on behalf of Rico’s crew.”“Still doesn’t make him an inside guy, Pearl,” I said. “He’s never been in the room when the plans go down. He’s a runner. Ready to move when told to move.”Sixth Avenue was its usual early-xadmorning slow traffic crawl, and Pearl turned to look at me.“This ain’t the first time you and me made a move off the word of a stoolie we barely knew,” he said. “Hell, not even the twenty-xadfirst time. So what makes this particular guy an itch you can’t seem to scratch?”“It’s nothing solid,” I said. “Just a feeling. A bad vibe. Nothing more.”“Let’s work off of what we know,” Pearl said. “The source broke it down from first step to last. He gave us the delivery time, the number of the building and the apartment. He told us who would be in there and how much cocaine they would be cutting up. Minus us having a wire dropped behind their television, we’re not going to get a better picture of what to expect than what he gave us.”“I’m not saying you’re wrong, Pearl. Truth is, you’re more than likely on the mark.”“If you’re feeling shaky about it, we can hold off. We can take a step back and come at Rico from another direction another time.”I stared out at the now-xadcongested streets crammed with people rushing to work. Most of them walked with earbuds solidly in place, either listening to music or getting a morning fix of gossip. “Let’s stick to the plan,” I said without turning to look away. “No better way to start a morning than to cause Rico and his boys their share of grief.”One hour later, I was crouched down, my back against a splintered and grimy cement wall, hidden by a stairwell lodged between the third and fourth floors of a dilapidated tenement. My black short-xadsleeve T-xadshirt was soaked through, the sweat a cocktail of adrenaline mixed with a dose of fear.My eyes were slow to adjust to the shadows. I could make out a series of overhead bulbs long since burned out. Blasts of television sound echoed from all sides, a strange brew of Kelly Ripa, ESPN, and Univision. The high volume easily pierced the thin wooden doors that posed as sentries to the neglected railroad apartments.Pearl was hunched down to my right, his shaved head and base of his neck dripping wet. “Second door on your left,” he whispered, gesturing with the gun he held in his right hand. “They should be in the room just past the kitchen.”“How many you figure are in there?”“Eight at the minimum,” Pearl said. “That’s a best guess. I could be off by one, maybe two.”I rested the back of my damp head against the cold wall and closed my eyes. I took in a few deep breaths, looking to control my breathing and slow down my heart rate. For any cop, the precious minutes before an anticipated shoot-xadout or takedown are both exhilarating and frightening. It is during that brief interlude when thoughts of life and death mingle with images of the unknown that awaits.Those are the moments a cop is at his most vulnerable. Read more

Features & Highlights

  • From the #1
  • New York Times
  • bestselling author of
  • Sleepers
  • and
  • The Wolf
  • , hailed as “simply the best” (Steve Berry) and “one of the most intriguing writers around” (
  • Newsweek
  • ). . . .
  • A top NYPD detective is pulled out of retirement to take down a notorious drug dealer. But will he risk the only family he’s ever had to crack the case?
  • As one of the NYPD’s most trusted “tin badges”—retired detectives brought in to solve cases that are beyond the reach of the everyday force—Tank Rizzo has faced off against some of the city’s toughest criminals without breaking a sweat. To tackle a case involving a dangerous kingpin known as Gonzo, Tank turns to his best friend and ex-partner, Pearl; a former mobster living out a seemingly quiet retirement as the owner of Tank’s favorite Italian restaurant; and a team of expert misfits he would trust with his life. But Gonzo will stop at nothing to defend the empire he's built, and won't hesitate to make it personal. Then Tank gets a call telling him that his brother and sister-in-law, estranged from him for many years, have been killed in a horrific car accident. Tank is the only family left for his orphaned teenage nephew, Chris, although he knows his lifestyle is ill-suited to win him father of the year. Chris moves in with Tank, and the two circle each other warily. It’s only when Chris reveals an interest in true crime and a genius-level skill with computers that they begin to bond. Chris’s skills may be exactly what Tank’s team needs to take Gonzo down—but getting him involved could put his life at risk.
  • Advance praise for
  • Tin Badges
  • “Carcaterra capably combines his trademark adrenaline-fueled action with the emotion involved in Tank taking on a parental role for a sometimes surly teen. All this needs, after a cliff-hanger close, is a sequel, and, fortunately, one is promised.”
  • Booklist
  • “Another gem from a writer who has earned his spot at the top echelon of suspense masters . . . Everything here leaps from the page, never stinting on the harsh reality, delivering a spicy, smart, and entertaining adventure.”
  • —Steve Berry,
  • New York Times
  • bestselling author of the Cotton Malone series

Customer Reviews

Rating Breakdown

★★★★★
30%
(113)
★★★★
25%
(94)
★★★
15%
(56)
★★
7%
(26)
23%
(86)

Most Helpful Reviews

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Series Debut With Interesting Irregulars With Somewhat Uneven Plotting And Characterization

(The copy that I reviewed was an early ARC, so it is quite possible that sections of this book will be possibly rewritten prior to release. Some plot spoilers exist due to explaining some readability issues.)

This book is about a retired NYPD Detective, Tommy ("Tank") Rizzo, who is pensioned but is given cold cases from his friend and patron, the NYPD Chief of Detectives, to solve as the force is too overwhelmed to deal with low profile second looks. Tank runs a group of civilian irregulars who have different skillsets to bring to the table to help him with the work, though unfortunately, it's pretty much handwaved how they came to work with Tank with one exception. Tank is more or less a godson of a local mobster, dines in his restaurant, and is on good terms with his daughter. Tank unexpectedly becomes the guardian of his nephew, whose parents died in mysterious circumstances at the start of the book (and whose mystery continues in the next book of the series). Tank gets what should be a pedestrian cold case involving a robbery and sexual assault of two prostitutes, which end up escalating into a hot drug war and a major Internal Affairs nightmare.

The dialogue is friendly, with conversations between various characters that help the setting and the relationship building. Much of the boring parts of the investigation are glossed over, practically each chapter in the book is an action sequence. The guardianship between Tank and Chris is quite believable considering the circumstances.

However, there are a couple of plot logic holes and characterization issues. While we are introduced to Tank's irregulars, they don't really have much characterization beyond their one operational purpose, and you really do not understand what motivates them to work with Tank. The extremely uneven use of the uniformed police for what is a major Internal Affairs incident with plenty of easily provable dirty cops and where special force is needed breaks suspension of disbelief. There is a scene at a cop bar where the police are out in full force with the senior Chief of Detectives leading arrests of off-duty dirty cops which is credible, but in the same book, Tank and his irregulars go up against a drug dealer's hideout without much support (and the scene previous has the uniformed police as bystanders while Tank and a civilian basically make a citizens arrest of dirty cops right in front of them). While it is foreshadowed in the opening chapters that Tank and Pearl have cowboy cop tendencies to charge in without assessing the situation, the ending sequence more or less repeats that mistake, only with the irregulars in tow which have dire consequences.

I am looking forward to the continuation of the series, but for even for a debut, I feel that this book could stand for some more editing to help flesh out some of the characterization and block certain scenes better.
7 people found this helpful
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Incredible Read?

I have enjoyed everyone of Carcaterra's novels. "Tin Badges' may be the best yet - one of the top three I've read during 2019. The story is certainly interesting, the characters and relationships not only touching but up close and personal. I felt a tear or two seep down my cheek more than once. And, it takes place in my favorite city to visit. BTW, Eisenberg's is a fantastic deli! Couldn't put the book down - read it in one sitting.
5 people found this helpful
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OK writing, overdone concept

This is an easy to read cop mystery book. Set in modern NY City, it includes drug slinging, the mafia, chases and gunfights.
Told in the first person, Tank Rizzo is likable enough. His character is fairly well developed.
I just thought it was kind of formula. Predicable. Overdone concept. Stereotypical. It seemed like at times the writer was just trying too hard to be clever.
I guess this is going to be the start of a series and it feels like the ending was written with that in mind so it was very unsatisfying.
2 people found this helpful
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It missed the mark I had hoped for, but was easy to read.

I can't do a 3.5 star, so it's a three. Let me tell you why. I don't mind the "nostalgic" feel of the '60s or '70s at all. This particular book; well I feel that it needed a boost. It has all the main roles, the Italian Mob, the inner city, the hot "chicks" who don't have a purpose in life but to drift through it being prey for others in power over them, the lead detective. Yep, that's a well-used plot, and I'm okay with that, but it didn't carry.

I feel that it drifted to action and mob rule, and lost the police work and crime-solving aspects. I felt that it took some turns to chaos instead of a solid story. The writing is easy to read, but the story fell short of the mark I wanted it to reach. I liked that Tank is working cold-cases, but there are some holes in this story that make me irritated. (Plot holes are an issue for me and some characters need some work as well!) Those holes might be solved in another book, but I have lost interest in this series at the moment.

That said, try the book for yourself. I have an ARC and things may well have changed or will be changing to make this book stronger!
2 people found this helpful
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Boring Police Procedural Is Deservedly Optioned for TV Series

TIN BADGES: A NOVEL has been optioned for TV by the producer of “NYPD Blue”, and it should make a terrific TV series. In the novel, a retired detective (“Tank” Rizzo), his disabled former partner (Pearl), an off-duty NYPD Chief of Detectives (Ray Connors), Tank’s computer-whiz teenage nephew (Chris), and a squad of street-smart misfits make up a team that solves NYPD cold cases (cases handed off to freelancer Tank by Connors). What a TV series framework!

As a novel, though, TIN BADGES is boring and predictable. Tank gets a not-so-cold case involving the brutal rapes of two women (prostitutes, maybe?) that the NYPD doesn’t want to handle. It’s likely that the women are connected to an NYC crime boss (Gonzo), who exacts swift and terminal retribution against anyone who knows too much about his operations.

When Tank gets onto Gonzo’s radar, it endangers not only his team, but his girlfriend (Connie Tramonti) and her father (Carmine). Connie and Carmine are the co-owners of Tramonti’s Italian restaurant/bar/jazz club, which Carmine established when he retired from running a major organized-crime numbers operation. The restaurant is now neutral ground for cops and criminals alike.

The 14-year-old nephew Chris has just lost his parents in an automobile “accident”, and is living with Tank only because it’s better than entering the foster care system. Chris hates Tank because Tank and his father had become estranged, and had stopped speaking to each other. Tank keeps the reason secret until the very end of the book, and the reveal isn’t worth the wait. Happily, the secret doesn’t affect the plot of this novel in any significant way.

The novel’s title is based on the fact (?) that retired gold-shield detectives who freelance like Tank are known as “tin badges”. The novel is decently written. The characters are mildly interesting in their cliched fashion (e.g., tough-talking Tank, Bruno the former boxer with a heart of gold, Chris the teenager with mad computer skillz, Connie the sensible and understanding love interest, etc.). The plot is a perfectly ordinary police procedural plot. More books in the series are promised, but I think that I’ll pass on them, even though I’m looking forward to the TV series.
2 people found this helpful
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"Tin Badges" Offers Exciting Action and Intriquing Characters

"Tin Badges" is the police slang term for retired cops who work on cold cases. Tank Rizzo, a retired detective of the NYPD, is the protagonist of this riveting tale of a robbery and assault case that uncovers a major drug operation. This fast-paced read is driven by the exciting action and the intriguing characters. Rizzo is somewhat of a loner, though he has a girlfriend who runs his favorite Italian restaurant along with her father, who is ironically an ex-mobster. Rizzo is devoted to former partner Frank "Pearl" Monroe, who is in rehab and paralyzed from the waist down from a police shootout. In addition to Pearl, Tank assembles an ragtag team of computer geeks, a psychic, and criminal informants who assist in his investigations. Rizzo's solitary lifestyle is suddenly altered when his brother, to whom he has not spoken in years, and sister-in-law die in a car accident. Their untimely deaths make an orphan of 15 year-old Chris, who comes to live with his uncle Tank. Given the history of family alienation, this is not a smooth transition. What keeps the plot moving and makes the characters jump off the pages is the entertaining dialogue. Readers who are fans of mysteries and police procedurals will not be disappointed. Author Lorenzo Carcaterrra was a former producer and writer of the television series "Law and Order." Having watched that show gave me a familiarity with the book's copspeak (like "perps," "vics," and "Rikers") peppered throughout the conversations. As I read the final take-down of the book, I noticed my heart was actually beating faster! Two stunning revelations in the denouement are simply begging for a sequel. Count me in!
1 people found this helpful
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Likable supporting cast + quick moving novel!

Little did I know when I asked my husband for a 🍝 night, it would align perfectly with the Italian food in “Tin Badges.” “Tin Badges” is a reverence to retired detectives brought in to solve cases that everyday officers are unable to. In this instance, it’s Tank Rizzo and his best friend and ex-partner, Pearl, and the rest of his team. Where do they operate out of? Tank’s favorite Italian restaurant in the city. While trying to catch Gonzo, a dangerous kingpin, Tank’s estranged brother and his wife die, leaving him stuck raising a 14-year-old while trying to solve the case.

This book was a breeze to get through and honestly, I needed that. We’re more than halfway through February and it’s only the second book I’ve finished. The novel, while a little implausible at times, moved quickly and I was left satisfied enough by the end to pick up the next one. The likable supporting cast really helped. I think if you’re interested in crime novels, this is up your alley!
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Great Story

This is one of his better books ,have read them all
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One hell of a book

This book was one of the best I have read in a long time, got some mob stories in it and ties families together, just a wonderful book, great interaction with the characters!! Loved it
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Stayed up way too late to finish it.

I'll buy anything from this author. Every book of his that I've read has been outstanding, and the story/characters have stayed with me for a long time. This one is no different.

Most of his books are stand alone, vs series. I really do hope that this one breaks that pattern. I would love to see their relationships develop and grow.