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- From: brock@ucsub.Colorado.EDU (Steve Brock)
- Subject: Review of The Raiders by Harold Robbins (fiction)
- Date: 11 Feb 1995 20:36:27 GMT
-
- THE RAIDERS by Harold Robbins. Simon and Schuster, 1230 Avenue of
- the Americas, N.Y., NY 10020, (800) 223-2336, (212) 698-7007 FAX.
- 368 pp., $23.00 cloth. 0-671-87289-3
-
- Reviewed by Steve Brock
-
- The Cord family conflict rages on...
-
- I was ten years old in 1961, the year the "The Carpetbaggers"
- was published, but I remember my parents discussing the book's
- scandalous portrayal of Hollywood lifestyles. I finally read the
- book in my twenties, and agreed with the many critics who announced
- that the book singlehandedly defined a genre: schlock - shocking,
- with a perceptible lack of literary value.
- In Robbins' sequel to "The Carpetbaggers," the father/son feud
- continues as Jonas Cord, Jr. (who suffered from his father's
- marrying his lover, Rina, in the previous novel) longs for a son as
- he adds to the empire he inherited from Jonas, Sr. in the early
- 1950s. But guess who shows up? Yup, an illegitimate son, named
- Jonas Enrique Raul Cord y Batista, from a long-ago liaison with a
- Cuban journalist, enters the scene to "assist" Jonas in running his
- many enterprises.
- As Jonas seeks to build a casino in Las Vegas, "Bat" moves
- into television, and their rivalry draws the honorable (Nevada
- Smith) and the disreputable (Jimmy Hoffa, Carlo Gambino, Che
- Guevara, John Kennedy, and Maldinesta, the ultimate hit man) into
- the fray, along with the unavoidable cast of ravishing wives and
- lovers who are just beginning to learn the joys of incest and
- administering oral sex.
- Robbins' fans will be pleased with this effort, but in my
- opinion, the "grand master" has again penned an embarrassing novel
- that is just not much fun. Reading "The Raiders" makes me wonder
- what Jacqueline Susann would have written, had she lived to produce
- a sequel to "Valley of the Dolls." Grade: D.
-
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