Will Beall, L.A. Rex (Riverhead, 2006) Author Will Beall is a beat cop in Los Angeles' infamous 77th division, which is the setting of his debut novel L.A. Rex. This made-for-a-screenplay novel is the gritty story of a whitebread rookie cop with a hidden past who is paired with a streetwise old-school doorbuster of a partner.
Beall has stated in interviews that he likes the street-level action of working in the 77th, where he feels like he knows everyone in a small town. Unfortunately, this "small town" feel doesn't translate well in a story taking place between 1972 and 2007, because every character is implausibly intertwined with several (or a dozen) others. The coincidences stretch the plausibility of the story, but they sure would make for some great action in a movie adaptation. Beall tells the story in chapters set at various points over this 15-year period, but different sets of characters appear in various chapters, requiring devotion on the part of the reader to keep them all straight. The author's day job as a cop brings a sense of legitimacy to the novel, which employs violence involving fire, trains, a garbage disposal, shanks, scalping and that pet jaguar. Beall is at work on a sequel called The Lion Hunters and, yes, L.A. Rex has been optioned for a big screen adaptation. ![]() |
![]() Rambles.NET review by Jessica Lux-Baumann 12 January 2008 ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() |