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All the Demons Are Here

A Novel

Audiobook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

From the bestselling author of The Devil May Dance and The Hellfire Club comes a breathtaking thriller that explores the chaotic underworlds of the 1970's after an AWOL US Marine returns home to a strange and dangerous country.

It's 1977. Ike and Lucy, Senator Charlie and Margaret Marder's kids, are grown up—and in trouble. US Marine Ike has gone somewhat off the grid, working on Evel Knievel's pit crew in Montana, when—after a bar fight—he has to flee a neo-Nazi gang and seek refuge in the woods with a group of Vietnam veterans. Lucy, a reporter, has become the star of the brand new Washington DC tabloid, the Sentinel, and is breaking all sorts of stories about a serial killer and falling in with the Lyons, the wealthy family that owns the newspaper, British immigrants with quite a different view of journalism than Lucy's heroes Woodward and Bernstein.

As their lives spiral out of control, Ike goes on the road with Evel Knievel, the Vietnam veterans, and other societal outcasts, first heading to Graceland to mourn Elvis Presley, then going to confront politicians—for grievances real and perceived—on an island in Georgia. Lucy, too, is at that retreat with both her parents and the Lyon family, attendees at this retreat where the future of the post-Nixon Republican party will be decided. The confrontation turns violent and both Ike and Lucy have to make decisions that will affect them for the rest of their lives.

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    • Library Journal

      February 1, 2023

      Son of a senator, Ike Marder joins Evel Knievel's pit crew in 1977 after a terrible experience as a U.S. Marine and ends up hiding from neo-Nazis with a bunch of Vietnam vets. Meanwhile, sister Lucy is a star journalist getting too cozy with a British family launching a tabloid in Washington, DC. Their stories cross at a political retreat in Georgia that turns violent. From CNN anchor Tapper, following the New York Times best-selling The Hellfire Club. Prepub Alert.

      Copyright 2023 Library Journal

      Copyright 2023 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

    • Publisher's Weekly

      May 8, 2023
      CNN news anchor Tapper’s limp third mystery featuring the Marder family (following 2021’s The Devil May Dance) shifts focus from politician Charlie Marder to his children, Ike and Lucy, in a narrative that toggles between developments in their lives in 1977. Ike, who was traumatized by a combat mission in Lebanon, has joined celebrity daredevil Evel Knievel in Montana as a member of his pit crew. Meanwhile, Lucy has been lured from her reporting job at Washington, D.C.’s Star newspaper after being cheated out of a byline to join the Sentinel, a lurid tabloid published by a Rupert Murdoch stand-in. As Ike struggles with violent impulses and his fraught relationship with Knievel, Lucy’s editors challenge her journalistic ethics when they try to pin the identity of a possible D.C.-area serial killer on a young Black man, despite the results of Lucy’s own investigation. Overwrought prose (“For America, the entire decade was like a once-glossy Polaroid fading in the sun, all that had been vibrant proven ephemeral”) doesn’t help sell some wildly improbable plot developments. When a character literally jumps the shark, it’s a sign that Tapper’s formerly exciting series may have done so as well. Agent: Robert B. Barnett, Williams & Connolly.

    • Kirkus

      June 1, 2023
      Tapper's family saga--begun in The Devil May Dance (2021)--continues in 1977 with Sen. Charlie Marder's son, Ike, hiding out with Evel Knievel in Montana, and daughter, Lucy, a budding reporter, tracking a serial killer in Virginia. Ike, an AWOL Marine, has joined the bad-tempered Knievel's pit crew as a way of eluding military authorities following a mysterious incident in Lebanon that left him with bullet wounds and a broken leg. Lucy, clinging to the notion that her job as a journalist "is to educate and enlighten," has been lured to a new tabloid owned by a Murdoch-like family. With the death of Elvis Presley and the Son of Sam's killings fouling the national mood, "everyone's on edge," one character says. Ultimately, the siblings' paths intersect on a Georgia island where their father is attending a Republican retreat and members of a freaky religious cult are planning a violent demonstration. A devoted history buff, Tapper, the CNN host, litters his novels with period details, movie and book references, political commentary, and celebrity cameos (Lucy's heroes Woodward and Bernstein make appearances). Ultimately, they serve the narrative less than the narrative serves them. Tapper feels compelled to explain his characters' references to familiar things, rather oddly including footnotes in chapters narrated by Lucy (Cindy-Lou Who, she tells us, was her favorite character in How the Grinch Stole Christmas). The serial killings stay on a back burner, Knievel is a concept more than a character, and Elvis gets an undue amount of attention. "It was hard to explain if you didn't already worship at the altar of the King," says Ike. More of an effort to do so would go a long way. A quasi-mystery in search of authenticity.

      COPYRIGHT(2023) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

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