JACKSON DONNE knows a few things about chances. The
New Jersey eye's had several. Once upon a time, he was a narcotics
cop. That came in handy, since he was also a narcotics user. That
came crashing down, leaving Donne on the outs with the police.
When we meet him in 2000's "God Bless the Child,"
he's mourning the loss of Jeanne, the woman who turned his life
around and cleaned him up. He's got a problem with the bottle
now, but manages it nicely -- or at least thinks he does. His
biggest problem, though, is that he doesn't know what to do with
his life. The instincts that made him a cop to begin with are
still in full force. He turns on a client who lies about abusing
a child ("God Bless the Child"), goes to bat
for a drinking buddy facing eviction ("More Sinned Against"),
watches in horror as the events of 9/11 claim two lives after
the fact ("Closure"), and finds out he's not
the only one with a past that won't leave him alone ("Get
Miles Away").
Set in New Brunswick, NJ, near Rutgers University, Donne is
a small town eye with an urban feel. The setting is made all the
more real by creator David White, Rutgers grad and New Brunswick
resident. White began the series while working on a thesis, a
novel called Borrowed Trouble, which he has since stripped
apart to create his short stories. A solid series, Jackson Donne
will be around for a long time to come.
EDITOR'S NOTE:
The third Jackson Donne story, "Closure,"
originally published printed right here, won the Derringer
Award for Best Short Story of 2002. Congrats, Dave. More recently, Dave created another private eye, Matt Herrick, but in July 2006, it was announced that Dave had signed a two-book deal with Three Rivers Press, and is hard at work on the first official Jackson Donne novel, tentatively titled When One Man Dies.
When One Man Dies was published in 2007, and received an almost obscene amount of blurb action.
UNDER OATH
"Derringer Awardwinner White's engrossing, evocative debut novel will grab most readers from its opening sentences...White manages to make improbable plot twists seem plausible, and his choice to alternate Donne's slightly unhinged first-person narration with the third-person perspective of New Brunswick Police Det. Bill Martin, Donne's despicably corrupt former partner and nemesis, works surprisingly well. Fans of hard-hitting, uncompromising private investigators will hope that Donne ditches his college dreams and continues to pound the pavement.
-- Publishers Weekly, starred review.
A terrific novel, a unique and artful blend of the PI and the Police Procedural in a plot as nicely tangled and sexually violent as a cat fight, a story as deceptively simple as your first love and as fatal as your last car wreck..
-- James Crumley
"Everybody wins when a classic form, such as the private-eye novel, meets up with a class act, such as Dave White. In his remarkable debut novel...White manages the neat trick of respecting the genre's traditions while daring to nudge it toward something new and unexpected... Lots of promise here -- in Donne and White. I'm rooting for both of them."
-- Laura Lippman
"Every now and then you find a debut novel that carries the clear promise of big things to come. When One Man Dies is one of those. Fast and funny, with plenty of classic action but a setting and character that are entirely new, Dave White is creating a winner with Jackson Donne. Always good to get in on the ground floor."
-- Michael Koryta
"Jackson Donne takes his place alongside the grim and battered P.I.s of yore -- your Archers, your Spades -- uncovering painful truths and doling out what passes in this tarnished world for justice. Bracing stuff."
-- Charles Ardai
When I read my first Dave White story, I knew that he was going to be huge somedaylike, Robert Parker huge. When One Man Dies is the first bold step in fulfilling that promise. Its the great American private eye novel reborn for the 21st century, with a fast-moving, spare style that punches you in the gut at the same time it squeezes your heart.
-- Duane Swierczynski
"Every new crew of crime writers has one standout, and true to form here comes Dave White, an author who made his bones in short story form before most writers ever find their legs. When One Man Dies steps him up as a made man in the genre an awesome debut forgetaboutit."
-- Charlie Stella
"When One Man Dies heralds the introduction of two astonishing new figures in the crime fiction world: New Jersey PI Jackson Donne, whose emotional journey will break your heart, and author Dave White, whose voice has the confidence and assurance many more established writers would kill for."
-- Sarah Weinman
NOVELS
Borrowed Trouble (2001; Rutgers; no longer available)