US author Ball is slowly building an intriguing body of work that stands head and shoulders apart from much of what his contemporaries in the noir field are doing, having completed with this volume an intricate trilogy in which an unnamed city is the main character. Explored in The Vaults and Scorch City, his plots flirt with SF, comic strip tropes and unveil what could be the even darker side of a Gotham City in which greed, power, corruption and money dictate the agenda and unerringly pump blood and fear through the veins of the city's streets. The struggles of an investigative journalist to understand his shifting environment anchor the tale with echoes of Kafka, Philip K. Dick, Orwell and Hammett. It's the 60s but not as we've known it. Hypnotic and gripping stuff well worth the full immersion effort required.
Big money reshapes an unnamed city as a radical group causes havoc in this thriller that ';portrays the realities of graft and moral compromise... perfectly' (Publishers Weekly, starred review). It's the mid-1960s, and the City is a hulking shell of itself. Bohemians, crooks, and snarling anti-Communists run the streets, but Nathan Canada's New City Project is about to paper over the grit and the grime, making the City safe for the rich. To Canada and his allies, the project is the City's last best hope. To everyone else, it's a death knell. So when the Project's cache of explosives goes missing, everyone is a suspect, and police detective Torsten Grip finds himself up against a ticking clock and a wall of silence. Meanwhile, journalist Frank Frings has been charged with the task of finding his friend's missing grandson, Sol Elia. But Sol has gotten himself involved with Kollectiv 61a radical group that may hold the key to Grip's investigation. The third novel in Ball's acclaimed City Trilogy, Invisible Streets is a sprawling epic of crime and corruption. ';Fans of writers like Caleb Carr, James Ellroy, and E.L. Doctorow need to give Ball a try.' Library Journal on Scorch City
'A dark, gritty, and slightly surreal urban thriller that reads like a collaboration between Philip K. Dick at his most nourish and Sidney Lumet. Skilfully plotted and intricately woven, Invisible Streets is one of the most original novels I've read this year.' David Bell, Author of The Forgotten Girl
Author
About Toby Ball
Toby Ball lives in Durham, NH with his wife and two children. He works at the Crimes Against Children Research Center and the Family Research Laboratory at the University of New Hampshire.