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The Darkest Glare

A True Story of Murder, Blackmail, and Real Estate Greed in 1979 Los Angeles

Audiobook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
Late-seventies Los Angeles was rampant with killers and shady characters, but all the go-getters at Space Matters saw was possibility. Richard Kasparov was handsome and charismatic; his younger associate, Jerry Schneiderman, brilliant and nerdy. When the pair hired a veteran contractor to oversee construction, the space planning firm they operated out of a hip mansion in LA's Miracle Mile district appeared poised to transform the boundless skyline into their jackpot. After the promising team imploded, however, the orderly lines on their blueprints succumbed to treachery and secrets. To get even, one of the ex-partners launched a murder-for-profit corporation using, among other peculiar sorts, a bantam-sized epileptic with a deadeye shot. The hapless criminals required a number of attempts to execute their first target. Once they did, on a rainy night in the San Fernando Valley, the surviving founder of Space Matters was thrown into a pressure cooker existence out of a Coen Brothers movie. Threatened for money he didn't have, he donned a disguise, survived a heart-pounding encounter at the La Brea Tar Pits, and relied on an ex-Israeli mercenary for protection. In the end, he had to outfox a glowering murderer, while asking if you can ever really know anyone in a town where dirty deals send men to their graves.
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    • Publisher's Weekly

      January 25, 2021
      This entertaining if uneven true crime narrative from Jacobs (Strange as It Seems: The Impossible Life of Gordon Zahler) spotlights two ambitious L.A. real estate developers in the late 1970s: Richard Kasparov, a glib, charismatic pitchman, and his partner Jerry Schneiderman, a nerdy but gifted designer. The pair hired rough-edged Howard Garrett as their construction supervisor. Kasparov turned out to be a bipolar thief who almost gutted the firm, earning Schneiderman’s distrust and rousing Garrett’s obsessive hatred. What follows is both horrifying and hilarious, as Garrett tries to organize an assassination-for-hire team by recruiting hapless drug addicts who couldn't find the right time or place to kill Kasparov. Eventually, they succeeded, and Garrett was charged with murder. Less successful is the author’s recounting of Garrett’s trial for Kasparov’s killing. Jacobs later shows how Garrett’s pathological intimidation reshaped the lives of Schneiderman and other survivors, but he piles on too much incidental information he gleaned during years of Schneiderman’s acquaintance and can’t resist the impulse to add sour observations on Americans’ hunger for possessions. Though undoubtedly odd and often unfocused, this still manages to fascinate. (Mar.)Correction: An earlier version of this review mischaracterized in one instance the nature of the relationship between Richard Kasparov, Jerry Schneiderman, and Howard Garrett.

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  • English

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