The Eye That Never Sleeps, by Clifford Browder, is reviewed.
Crossing back on schedule to New York City around the late nineteenth century, Clifford Browder's The Eye That Never Sleeps represents a strongly splendid interpretation of the chronicled wrongdoing thrill ride with an enticingly wound account that unites history, secret, and stunningly fully explored characters. A developing secret is in the air in the extending city of 1869 New York City when three banks are ransacked inside a nine-month time span. Of specific concern is the theft of the Bank of Trade which is viewed as the heist of the century. Additionally, the criminal has the nerve to boast about the burglaries via shipping off the leader of each bank bragging rhyming sections and a key to the bank not long after the wake of each planned burglary. In the mean time, shockingly for the investors, the police division has been overpowered by the weighty caseloads of other criminal examinations which leaves the city's financiers in developing franticness. Searching f...