Dirty Metal by Allison LaMothe drops readers into pre-Giuliani New York City with a pill-popping, rule-breaking tabloid reporter at its center—and it does so with real confidence for a debut. Set in 1992, the novel follows Parker Snow, a 27-year-old crime reporter whose last big story went spectacularly wrong. Now sidelined onto organized crime coverage, Parker is desperate to prove she still belongs on the streets, no matter how questionable her methods become.

LaMothe’s biggest strength is atmosphere. The city feels grimy, volatile, and alive, especially as Russian organized crime begins asserting power in Brighton Beach. Parker herself fits this world: reckless, sharp-tongued, and driven more by obsession than good judgment. She steals, trespasses, manipulates sources, and self-medicates her trauma, all while insisting she’s chasing the truth. It’s not hard to see how she landed in professional trouble—and why her boss tries to keep her on a short leash.
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