Blood on the Moon (novel)

Blood on the Moon

First edition cover
Author James Ellroy
Country United States
Language English
Series Lloyd Hopkins Trilogy
Genre crime fiction
Publisher The Mysterious Press
Publication date
March 1984
Media type Print (hardcover & paperback), audio cassette and audio CD
Pages 263 pp (first edition, hardcover)
ISBN 0-89296-069-8 (first edition, hardcover)
OCLC 10685673
813/.54 19
LC Class PS3555.L6274 B55 1984
Preceded by Clandestine (1982)
Followed by Because the Night (1984)

Blood on the Moon (1984) is a crime novel by James Ellroy. It is the first installment of the Lloyd Hopkins Trilogy. It was followed by Because the Night (1984) and Suicide Hill (1985). Although the novels are written in multiple perspectives and narrated omnisciently, the main character in all three is Lloyd Hopkins.

Plot summary

The story begins in 1965 during the Watts Riots in Los Angeles, California. 23-year-old Lloyd Hopkins is still with the National Guard and is deployed to help handle the situation. It is during this riot that Hopkins kills his first man, a deranged armory sergeant who was hunting down and killing African Americans.

Eighteen years later Hopkins is now a sergeant with the LAPD and has the highest number of arrests of any officer in the department's history. He is considered a genius by many of his associates for his uncanny ability to make intuitive leaps of logic when tracking down criminals. Soon his abilities are put to the test when he investigates the brutal murder of a woman who was disemboweled in her apartment. Hopkins quickly deduces that the person responsible for this murder has in fact been killing women since the late 1960s, but has never been caught because he always changes his modus operandi.

A subplot of the novel involves Hopkins' relationship with his family. He adores his three daughters and deeply loves his wife, though he is chronically unfaithful to her. His wife loves Lloyd, but begins to realize that his habits are not healthy for their children, particularly his propensity for telling them about the cases that he has worked on.

Film adaptation


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