"Enjoyable and undeniably clever. With the overlapping of so much deception (Ben) Cramb discovers he can be dizzied just as easily by love as others can by money. And that's not a trick or swindle." -- "Chicago Sun Times " "This rich, wonderfully imagined book is a war novel, a historical epic, a love story and a picaresque romp all rolled into one. Griffin clearly has done his research, as the New York of this period comes vividly to life, with its gimcrack newbies, the promise of quick money, the thronging side streets and the shattering el trains - and the plusher department stores which sing out a siren call of money. It is to Ben and men like him a playground and a proving ground, where around every corner there's a sucker born. In this, his fourth novel, Griffin has really honed his writing to its finest cadence yet. The sentences have a bouncing, pell-mell momentum - they climb the walls, dust the streets, and sweep the rising tide of characters back and forth and, finally, on toward the coming war which Ben tried so hard to leave behind.
It's a rare thing, this novel about conning, which acknowledges that the predatory instinct of a con-artist proceeds from a closeted understanding of his own ineradicable weakness." -- John Freeman, president of the National Book Critics Circle, in the "Newark Star Ledger" "Nicholas Griffin has made historical fiction his literary playground . [and] 1916 Manhattan proves especially fertile ground. Griffin writes with authority on his chosen subjects, and even though he employs enough point-of-view shifts to give an unintended meaning to his book's title, the effect works, raising the question: Who is conning, and whois being conned?" -- Sarah Weinman, "Time Out New York" "The intricate crime drama plays out like a blindfolded chess match; Ben's postwar paranoia and a romance with a secretive actress only add to the delicious confusion. Griffin deftly shifts among three different narrators, parceling out unexpected revelations with the confident wink of an experienced hustler." --" Entertainment Weekly" "Griffin demonstrates a flare for the historical novel. This clever, agile novel is thoroughly enjoyable." -- "Library Journal" "Ben Cramb, the strange and fascinating leading character in Nicholas Griffin's new novel "Dizzy City," is a severely wounded World War I soldier who deserts the British army rather than return to the trenches of France, becomes a stowaway on a wartime ship bound for the United States, which has not yet entered the war.
In New York, he becomes a con man of major proportions, all the while haunted by the war he has run from. Griffin's story is wonderfully written with masterful style. I was riveted by Ben Cramb." -- Dominick Dunne "A great read. richly researched, complex and utterly compelling." -- Mark Mills, author of "The Savage Garden " "Griffin hits his stride in his fourth novel, a stylish and ambitious story of cons conning cons. [He's] in fine form, and the novel's historical detail and multifaceted plot should keep readers riveted." --"Publishers Weekly" Ben Cramb, "a petty criminal, flees the carnage of teh Great War and lands among con men in the Big Apple, where war of a different sort is being waged.
When various stings come to a climax, they involve the war Ben thought he had escaped. Smart entertainment."-- "Kirkus Reviews" ""Dizzy City" is ingenious, a caper inside a historical novel full of unexpected twists and turns. Delightful!" -- Kevin Baker "Ranging from the trenches of the Great War to Tin Pan Alley and the Great White Way, "Dizzy City" is rich and absorbing. Nicholas Griffin is a surehanded talespinner, his prose vivid yet never showy. This is the best sort of historical drama, lovingly detailed yet concerned more, ultimately, with the tricky, conflicted hearts of its actors." -- Stewart O'Nan "Pat Barker meets Raymond Chandler. "Dizzy City" is.