Margins
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Isaac Sidel
Series · 12
books · 1975-2017

Books in series

Blue Eyes book cover
#1

Blue Eyes

1975

Set in a shocking New York underworld populated by a constellation of punks, low lifes, thugs, nymphs, vice lords and bag men, Blue Eyes is the second book in Jerome Charyn's classic Isaac Quartet. Manfred 'Blue Eyes' Coen is a cop on loan to the First Deputy's office, sent to the mean streets of his old Bronx neighbourhood to do some very dirty business. Child brides are being kidnapped and are turning up in Mexico, and the daughter of a millionaire has gone missing. Are Coen's childhood friends, the Guzmanns, the key to this mystery? Coen's mentor, the disgraced First Deputy, Isaac Sidel, knew that there was only one man for the job. So, caught between his childhood loyalties and his reputation as the toughest, sharpest cop in New York City, it's up to Blue Eyes to solve the case. But too many people are double-crossing him - and too many people want him dead
Marilyn the Wild book cover
#2

Marilyn the Wild

1976

Book by Charyn, Jerome
The Education of Patrick Silver book cover
#3

The Education of Patrick Silver

1976

'A satiric hothouse of fast talk and low life' — Washington Post'He writes like greased lightning' — Time Out'Jerome Charyn is a realist of the urban nightmare' — Chicago Tribune—This text refers to an alternate Paperback edition. Isaac Sidel had been born into this world to plague the Guzmanns, a tribe of Peruvian pimps who operated out of the Bronx. His target was now Jeronimo Guzmann, but he was under the protection of a new bodyguard, a crazy Irish ex-cop called Patrick Silver.
Secret Isaac book cover
#4

Secret Isaac

1978

1st trade edition paperback fine
The Good Policeman book cover
#5

The Good Policeman

1990

Sent on a cross-country lecture tour after capturing the FBI's most wanted criminal, New York City Police Commissioner Isaac Sidel returns to the city and finds himself battling criminals, the establishment, and the Christy Mathewson Club
Maria's Girls book cover
#6

Maria's Girls

1992

Isaac Sidel ist zwar Polizeichef von New York, doch immer noch am liebsten auf der Straße unterwegs. In seinem Kampf gegen ein verwahrlostes Schulsystem bekommt er es mit einem mächtigen Gegenspieler zu tun. Schulbeauftragter Carlos María Montalban veruntreut Bildungsgelder, macht aus Schulen Drogenumschlagsplätze und paktiert mit der Mafia. Um ihm das Handwerk zu legen, heuert Isaac seinen ersten Partner seit der Ermordung von »Blue Eyes« Coen an. Detective Caroll Brent soll an New Yorks Schulen patrouillieren und verdeckt gegen María ermitteln. Dabei ahnt Isaac nicht, wie sehr sein neuer Partner zwischen allen Fronten steht. Bald wird klar, dass Isaac Sidel mit seiner Mission an Mächtigen und Machenschaften rüttelt, die ihn das Leben kosten könnten.
Montezuma's Man book cover
#7

Montezuma's Man

1993

Police Commissioner Isaac Sidel and Joe Barbarossa, a drug-dealing Manhattan police detective, team up as the Black Stocking Twins, a team formed to purge New York of its criminal element.
Little Angel Street book cover
#8

Little Angel Street

1994

The fourth volume in the New Isaac Quartet features Mayor-elect Isaac Sidel, formerly NYPD Commissioner, at his eccentric best as he copes with the rascist Knickerbocker Boys, who are murdering the city's homeless, and struggles to control the Police Department.
El Bronx book cover
#9

El Bronx

1997

In the emerald island of Yankee Stadium Isaac watches millionaires play baseball, while a few blocks away children smoke crack and wave kitchen knives in the air. This is the borough where wild dogs used to roam the parks. This is the land where an angel paints paeans to fallen gangsters on a wall on Featherbed Lane - paintings so beautiful they could get him killed. This is a place where they call Mayor Isaac Sidel El Caballo - and where El Caballo knows his city is up for grabs. The Yankees' owner wants to take the team from the Bronx. A corrupt lawyer is paving the way in gold and greed. And on the streets of the Bronx gangsters are waging wars of revenge. Obsessed with the Yankees and the young graffiti artist, Isaac discovers a dummy corporation is dumping money into a Bronx real estate scam, and that unlikely bedfellows are forging unholy alliances all around him. Now the mayor of New York is missing again. He's gone with his Glock to the Bronx in search of a boy nicknamed Alyosha who may die for beauty by the side of a jaded little rich girl. His city beyond redemption, his own soul racked by guilt and illusion, El Caballo is going to save the Bronx, or bury his heart there.
Citizen Sidel book cover
#10

Citizen Sidel

1999

The Big Guy is running for the White House. Or rather, his self-aggrandizing sometimes partner baseball czar J. Michael Storm is running for president, and taking the mayor of New York along - not for the ride, but for the muscle. Isaac is all muscle. While the Dems throng at the Garden and the pundits watch the polls, the mayor is hitting the streets, investigating a murder and a little fiefdom of corruption.
Under the Eye of God book cover
#11

Under the Eye of God

2012

After decades of madness in the Bronx, Isaac Sidel visits the craziest state in the Country. Isaac Sidel is too popular to be America's vice president. Once the New York Police Department commissioner, he became the most beloved mayor in the city's history - famous for his refusal to surrender his Glock, and for his habit of disappearing for months at a time to fight crime at street level. So when baseball czar J. Michael Storm asks Sidel to join him on the election's Democratic ticket, the two wild men romp to an unprecedented landslide. But as the president-elect's mandate goes off the rails - threatened by corruption, sex, and God knows what else - he tires of being overshadowed by Sidel, and dispatches him to a place from which tough politicians seldom return: Texas. In the Lone Star state, Sidel confronts rogue astrologers, accusations of pedophilia, and a dimwitted assassin who doesn't know when to take an easy shot. If this Bronx bomber doesn't watch his step, he risks making vice-presidential history by getting killed on the job.
Winter Warning book cover
#12

Winter Warning

2017

Reflecting our own world like a volatile funhouse mirror, Winter Warning lures us back to the 1980s, an era that could have been ripped right out of our most recent political upheaval. Isaac Sidel should have been vice president, banished to some far corner of the West Wing, but the president-elect has been forced to resign or face indictment for his crooked land deals—and Sidel becomes the accidental president. He’s a maverick, a crusader with a Glock in his belt, who defies both the Republicans and the Democrats. He seems haunted by Lincoln’s ghost, and the presidential palace becomes his own “great white jail,” as it did for Harry Truman. There’s never been another president quite like Isaac Sidel, New York’s former police commissioner and mayor. There’s a secret lottery created by some bankers in Basel to determine the exact date of Sidel’s death. And Sidel has to outrun this lottery in order to save himself. His greatest allies are not the Secret Service or the DNC, but a former Israeli prime minister who was a explosives operative during the British occupation of Palestine . . . as well as a mysterious billionaire who belongs to a brotherhood of killers and counterfeiters. His only companions in the capital are the captain of his helicopter fleet and a sexy naval intelligence officer who realizes that something has gone amuck at Camp David, when a band of mercenaries arrive with their sights trained on Sidel.

Author

Jerome Charyn
Jerome Charyn
Author · 50 books

Jerome Charyn is an award-winning American author. With more than 50 published works, Charyn has earned a long-standing reputation as an inventive and prolific chronicler of real and imagined American life. Pulitzer Prize-winning novelist Michael Chabon calls him "one of the most important writers in American literature." New York Newsday hailed Charyn as "a contemporary American Balzac," and the Los Angeles Times described him as "absolutely unique among American writers." Since the 1964 release of Charyn's first novel, Once Upon a Droshky, he has published thirty novels, three memoirs, eight graphic novels, two books about film, short stories, plays, and works of non-fiction. Two of his memoirs were named New York Times Book of the Year. Charyn has been a finalist for the PEN/Faulkner Award for Fiction. He received the Rosenthal Award from the American Academy of Arts and Letters and was named Commander of Arts and Letters by the French Minister of Culture. Charyn is Distinguished Professor Emeritus of Film Studies at the American University of Paris. In addition to writing and teaching, Charyn is a tournament table tennis player, once ranked in the top ten percent of players in France. Noted novelist Don DeLillo called Charyn's book on table tennis, Sizzling Chops & Devilish Spins, "The Sun Also Rises of ping-pong." Charyn's most recent novel, Jerzy, was described by The New Yorker as a "fictional fantasia" about the life of Jerzy Kosinski, the controversial author of The Painted Bird. In 2010, Charyn wrote The Secret Life of Emily Dickinson, an imagined autobiography of the renowned poet, a book characterized by Joyce Carol Oates as a "fever-dream picaresque." Charyn lives in New York City. He's currently working with artists Asaf and Tomer Hanuka on an animated television series based on his Isaac Sidel crime novels.

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