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==Plot==
==Plot==
Mob boss Bernie Banks and his associates—John Leblanc, Ben Berardi, and Jerome Dexter-Dixon are two white and two black men who style themselves after the Rude Boy culture made famous in Jamaica. Operating as a shell investment company supported by illegal activities, the Chimera Group hopes to become as powerful as other crime families and gain respect from the Cosa Nostra. They face internal strife when one of the associates begins dating a former Playboy Club waitress Celia Jones who joins the group through questionable circumstances. Her old occupation follows her into the group by her name, Bunny.<ref>{{cite web|title=You MUST Read This Book! Rude Boy USA by Victoria Bolton|url=http://ambmagazine.com/you-must-read-this-book-rude-boy-usa-by-victoria-bolton/|publisher=AMB (magazine)|accessdate=20 November 2016|date=27 July 2016}}</ref> Their efforts and push for power also draw the attention of rival Ambrosino family which puts the two groups into a war. In BunnyWine, Bunny (Celia) and John transition out of mob life and rebrands Chimera into a reputable company and attempt to break into politics but is derailed by his former partner in crime Ben Berardi and ambitious New York City prosecutor Mario Pasquale. In the Tide is High, after John’s imprisonment and trial he runs for mayor of New York but finds that Mario Pasquale has the same goals as him. Mario pulls all of the stops to derail John’s campaign.<ref>{{cite web|title=Rude Boy USA (Rude Boy USA Series Volume 1)|url=http://www.goodreads.com/book/show/28160711-rude-boy-usa|publisher=[[Goodreads]]|accessdate=20 November 2016}}</ref>
Mob boss Bernie Banks and his associates—John Leblanc, Ben Berardi, and Jerome Dexter-Dixon are two white and two black men who style themselves after the Rude Boy culture made famous in Jamaica. Operating as a shell investment company supported by illegal activities, the Chimera Group hopes to become as powerful as other crime families and gain respect from the Cosa Nostra. They face internal strife when one of the associates begins dating a former Playboy Club waitress Celia Jones who joins the group through questionable circumstances. Her old occupation follows her into the group by her name, Bunny.<ref>{{cite web|title=You MUST Read This Book! Rude Boy USA by Victoria Bolton|url=http://ambmagazine.com/you-must-read-this-book-rude-boy-usa-by-victoria-bolton/|publisher=AMB (magazine)|accessdate=20 November 2016|date=27 July 2016}}</ref> Their efforts and push for power also draw the attention of rival Ambrosino family which puts the two groups into a war. In BunnyWine, Bunny (Celia) and John transition out of mob life and rebrands Chimera into a reputable company and attempt to break into politics but is derailed by his former partner in crime Ben Berardi and ambitious New York City prosecutor Mario Pasquale. In the Tide is High, after John’s imprisonment and trial he runs for mayor of New York but finds that Mario Pasquale has the same goals as him. Mario pulls all of the stops to derail John’s campaign.<ref>{{cite web|title=Rude Boy USA (Rude Boy USA Series Volume 1)|url=http://www.goodreads.com/book/show/28160711-rude-boy-usa|publisher=[[Goodreads]]|accessdate=20 November 2016}}</ref>

==Rude Boy USA==
Mob boss Bernie Banks and his associates—John, Ben, and Jerome—differ from your ordinary Sicilian and Irish mob families. Two white, two black, they style themselves after the Rude Boy culture made popular in Jamaica.

Operating as a shell investment company supported by illegal activities, the Chimera Group hopes to become as powerful as other crime families and gain respect from the Cosa Nostra. Bernie, a war veteran of Jewish and Greek descent, begins his business in his apartment and grows it into a multimillion-dollar empire. He and his crew resemble a more sophisticated subculture of urban street gangsters with their Ray-Ban sunglasses, loafers, and debonair style. But they want fear and admiration.
Their efforts draw the attention of the rival Ambrosino family, and they face internal strife when one of the associates begins dating a former Playboy Club waitress who wants in on the group.

==BunnyWine==
John, who creates a wine based off of Playboy Club Celia “Bunny” Jones’s rise to crescendo, moves to Jamaica and marries Bunny after their company becomes successful. He gives up his life as a mob boss to become a respectable businessman and market BunnyWine as Bunny adjusts to not getting the life of a gangster’s wife she was expecting.

John may be gone but he’s not forgotten, and ambitious criminal prosecutor Mario Pasquale, whose goal is to rid New York City of the mob, strikes a deal with jailed Chimera member Ben Berardi to let him out of jail in exchange for any information he can get on John. But when Ben falls into old and dangerous habits, the body count starts to rise.

==The Tide Is High==
John, who creates a wine based off of Playboy Club Celia “Bunny” Jones’s rise to crescendo, moves to Jamaica and marries Bunny after their company becomes successful. He gives up his life as a mob boss to become a respectable businessman and market BunnyWine as Bunny adjusts to not getting the life of a gangster’s wife she was expecting.

John may be gone but he’s not forgotten, and ambitious criminal prosecutor Mario Pasquale, whose goal is to rid New York City of the mob, strikes a deal with jailed Chimera member Ben Berardi to let him out of jail in exchange for any information he can get on John. But when Ben falls into old and dangerous habits, the body count starts to rise.<ref>https://marcsbookshelf.com/2017/03/01/featured-series-the-rude-boy-usa-trilogy-by-victoria-bolton/</ref>



==Structure==
==Structure==
[[File:Trilogy wiki.png|thumb|The three books in the Rude Boy USA Series. Rude Boy USA, BunnyWine and The Tide is High.]]
[[File:Trilogy wiki.png|thumb|The three books in the Rude Boy USA Series. Rude Boy USA, BunnyWine and The Tide is High.]]
Rude Boy USA consists of fifteen chapters. BunnyWine and The Tide is High consists of ten chapters each.
Rude Boy USA consists of fifteen chapters. BunnyWine and The Tide is High consists of ten chapters each.

==Origins==
Bolton says she drew inspiration for the series from both musical and contemporary sources. Her main source of inspiration comes from the SKA group The Specials <ref>https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Specials.</ref> Bolton cites the unique racial makeup of the band as the main model for the makeup of the fictional Chimera Investment group noted in the novels. <ref>http://www.sntmag.com/artist-of-the-week/rude-boy-usa/</ref>

A contemporary source of inspiration was the female lead was inspired by the Playboy Bunny waitresses from the flagship Playboy Club in New York. <ref>https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Playboy_Club</ref> Bolton felt that an African-American Bunny has not been featured as a main character in any story and that her presence would give readers a different perspective of the club. Bolton admits that John LeBlanc's character was created from a long-term crush on a professional athlete.



==Critical reception==
==Critical reception==
All three books have been favorably received.<ref>{{cite web|title=Victoria Bolton- The Success Story Of A Bestselling And Award Winning Author|url=https://www.buzzfeed.com/lerosetrim/victoria-bolton-the-success-story-of-a-bestsellin-2jsi3|publisher=[[BuzzFeed]]|accessdate=20 November 2016}}</ref> [[Kirkus]] noted that Bolton aptly captures the tempestuous spirit of the time–a volatile brew of political radicalism, crime, [[racial tension]], and sexual libertinism–and her painstaking historical research is evident on virtually every page.<ref>{{cite web|title=Rude Boy USA by Victoria Bolton {{!}} Kirkus Reviews|url=https://www.kirkusreviews.com/book-reviews/victoria-bolton/rude-boy-usa/|publisher=[[Kirkus Reviews]]|accessdate=20 November 2016|language=en-us}}</ref> [[The Huffington Post]] described the Rude Boy USA series as life in New York City in the early 1970s in so much detail that you feel as if you were there with the characters. She introduces us to another facet of life in the mafia as a minority without making their existence in the culture seem tragic. Each chapter is tense with sudden twists and turns, but the story never falls flat or repetitive; it stays fascinating with new surprises throughout.<ref>{{cite news|title=Book Review: Victoria Bolton's 'Rude Boy' USA Trilogy|url=http://www.huffingtonpost.com/adeyemi-adetilewa/book-review-victoria-bolt_b_11706224.html|accessdate=20 November 2016|publisher=[[The Huffington Post]]|date=25 August 2016}}</ref> Rude Boy USA has received the Bronze medal in the [[Reader's Favorite|Readers’ Favorite 2016 book awards]] in the Drama category.<ref name="readersfavorite" /> Rude Boy USA has also won the [[Pacific Northwest Booksellers Association Award|Pacific Book Award]] for Best Crime.<ref name="pacificbookreview" />
All three books have been favorably received.<ref>{{cite web|title=Victoria Bolton- The Success Story Of A Bestselling And Award Winning Author|url=https://www.buzzfeed.com/lerosetrim/victoria-bolton-the-success-story-of-a-bestsellin-2jsi3|publisher=[[BuzzFeed]]|accessdate=20 November 2016}}</ref> [[Kirkus]] noted that Bolton aptly captures the tempestuous spirit of the time–a volatile brew of political radicalism, crime, [[racial tension]], and sexual libertinism–and her painstaking historical research is evident on virtually every page.<ref>{{cite web|title=Rude Boy USA by Victoria Bolton {{!}} Kirkus Reviews|url=https://www.kirkusreviews.com/book-reviews/victoria-bolton/rude-boy-usa/|publisher=[[Kirkus Reviews]]|accessdate=20 November 2016|language=en-us}}</ref> [[The Huffington Post]] described the Rude Boy USA series as life in New York City in the early 1970s in so much detail that you feel as if you were there with the characters. She introduces us to another facet of life in the mafia as a minority without making their existence in the culture seem tragic. Each chapter is tense with sudden twists and turns, but the story never falls flat or repetitive; it stays fascinating with new surprises throughout.<ref>{{cite news|title=Book Review: Victoria Bolton's 'Rude Boy' USA Trilogy|url=http://www.huffingtonpost.com/adeyemi-adetilewa/book-review-victoria-bolt_b_11706224.html|accessdate=20 November 2016|publisher=[[The Huffington Post]]|date=25 August 2016}}</ref> Rude Boy USA has received the Bronze medal in the [[Reader's Favorite|Readers’ Favorite 2016 book awards]] in the Drama category.<ref name="readersfavorite" /> Rude Boy USA has also won the [[Pacific Northwest Booksellers Association Award|Pacific Book Award]] for Best Crime.<ref name="pacificbookreview" />

==Film adaptations==
Screenwriter Doug Klozzer has completed a full feature film treatment for the first book in the series Rude Boy USA. <ref>http://markets.post-gazette.com/postgazette/news/read/33773527</ref>


==References==
==References==

Revision as of 15:24, 2 March 2017

Rude Boy USA
File:Rude-Boy-USA-cover.jpg
AuthorVictoria Bolton
GenreCrime fiction
PublisherHairummat Books
Publication date
25 December 2015 (2015-12-25)
ISBN9781518754333
OCLC940964203
Websiteauthorvictoriabolton.com

Rude Boy USA is a series of three crime fiction novels written by the American novelist Victoria Bolton. The series is set in New York City and Jamaica and follows characters, Bernie “Banks” Rhodos, Celia “Bunny” Jones, John LeBlanc, Ben Berardi, and Jerome Dexter-Dixon.[1]

The novels in the trilogy are titled Rude Boy USA (2015), BunnyWine (2016), and The Tide is High (2016). The novels were all well received. The first book in the series is an Amazon best seller and won the Readers’ Favorite 2016 award for drama[2] and Pacific Book Award for Best Crime.[3] Rude Boy USA series is an organized crime tale set in New York City beginning in the late 1960’s, that follows a multi-cultural group of mobsters. The series spans over two decades ending in the early 1990’s at the conclusion of The Tide is High.[4]

Plot

Mob boss Bernie Banks and his associates—John Leblanc, Ben Berardi, and Jerome Dexter-Dixon are two white and two black men who style themselves after the Rude Boy culture made famous in Jamaica. Operating as a shell investment company supported by illegal activities, the Chimera Group hopes to become as powerful as other crime families and gain respect from the Cosa Nostra. They face internal strife when one of the associates begins dating a former Playboy Club waitress Celia Jones who joins the group through questionable circumstances. Her old occupation follows her into the group by her name, Bunny.[5] Their efforts and push for power also draw the attention of rival Ambrosino family which puts the two groups into a war. In BunnyWine, Bunny (Celia) and John transition out of mob life and rebrands Chimera into a reputable company and attempt to break into politics but is derailed by his former partner in crime Ben Berardi and ambitious New York City prosecutor Mario Pasquale. In the Tide is High, after John’s imprisonment and trial he runs for mayor of New York but finds that Mario Pasquale has the same goals as him. Mario pulls all of the stops to derail John’s campaign.[6]

Rude Boy USA

Mob boss Bernie Banks and his associates—John, Ben, and Jerome—differ from your ordinary Sicilian and Irish mob families. Two white, two black, they style themselves after the Rude Boy culture made popular in Jamaica.

Operating as a shell investment company supported by illegal activities, the Chimera Group hopes to become as powerful as other crime families and gain respect from the Cosa Nostra. Bernie, a war veteran of Jewish and Greek descent, begins his business in his apartment and grows it into a multimillion-dollar empire. He and his crew resemble a more sophisticated subculture of urban street gangsters with their Ray-Ban sunglasses, loafers, and debonair style. But they want fear and admiration. Their efforts draw the attention of the rival Ambrosino family, and they face internal strife when one of the associates begins dating a former Playboy Club waitress who wants in on the group.

BunnyWine

John, who creates a wine based off of Playboy Club Celia “Bunny” Jones’s rise to crescendo, moves to Jamaica and marries Bunny after their company becomes successful. He gives up his life as a mob boss to become a respectable businessman and market BunnyWine as Bunny adjusts to not getting the life of a gangster’s wife she was expecting.

John may be gone but he’s not forgotten, and ambitious criminal prosecutor Mario Pasquale, whose goal is to rid New York City of the mob, strikes a deal with jailed Chimera member Ben Berardi to let him out of jail in exchange for any information he can get on John. But when Ben falls into old and dangerous habits, the body count starts to rise.

The Tide Is High

John, who creates a wine based off of Playboy Club Celia “Bunny” Jones’s rise to crescendo, moves to Jamaica and marries Bunny after their company becomes successful. He gives up his life as a mob boss to become a respectable businessman and market BunnyWine as Bunny adjusts to not getting the life of a gangster’s wife she was expecting.

John may be gone but he’s not forgotten, and ambitious criminal prosecutor Mario Pasquale, whose goal is to rid New York City of the mob, strikes a deal with jailed Chimera member Ben Berardi to let him out of jail in exchange for any information he can get on John. But when Ben falls into old and dangerous habits, the body count starts to rise.[7]


Structure

File:Trilogy wiki.png
The three books in the Rude Boy USA Series. Rude Boy USA, BunnyWine and The Tide is High.

Rude Boy USA consists of fifteen chapters. BunnyWine and The Tide is High consists of ten chapters each.

Origins

Bolton says she drew inspiration for the series from both musical and contemporary sources. Her main source of inspiration comes from the SKA group The Specials [8] Bolton cites the unique racial makeup of the band as the main model for the makeup of the fictional Chimera Investment group noted in the novels. [9]

A contemporary source of inspiration was the female lead was inspired by the Playboy Bunny waitresses from the flagship Playboy Club in New York. [10] Bolton felt that an African-American Bunny has not been featured as a main character in any story and that her presence would give readers a different perspective of the club. Bolton admits that John LeBlanc's character was created from a long-term crush on a professional athlete.


Critical reception

All three books have been favorably received.[11] Kirkus noted that Bolton aptly captures the tempestuous spirit of the time–a volatile brew of political radicalism, crime, racial tension, and sexual libertinism–and her painstaking historical research is evident on virtually every page.[12] The Huffington Post described the Rude Boy USA series as life in New York City in the early 1970s in so much detail that you feel as if you were there with the characters. She introduces us to another facet of life in the mafia as a minority without making their existence in the culture seem tragic. Each chapter is tense with sudden twists and turns, but the story never falls flat or repetitive; it stays fascinating with new surprises throughout.[13] Rude Boy USA has received the Bronze medal in the Readers’ Favorite 2016 book awards in the Drama category.[2] Rude Boy USA has also won the Pacific Book Award for Best Crime.[3]

Film adaptations

Screenwriter Doug Klozzer has completed a full feature film treatment for the first book in the series Rude Boy USA. [14]

References