After discovering his quarry naked in the bathtub, doped up and missing his kidneys, Federal Marshall Raylan Givens becomes involved, both literally and figuratively, in a case involving the harvesting of organs for sale on the black market where this time the bad guys are girls. Simultaneous.
"synopsis" may belong to another edition of this title.
Review:
""Raylan" is Leonard's best of the 21st century--good stuff from first page to last."--Los Angeles Times Book Review
"The smarter crooks give Raylan grudging respect; his fellow lawmen grant him their highest praise: 'You're doin' a job the way we like to see it done.' The same can be said of the 86-year-old Elmore Leonard."--Wall Street Journal
"A punchy mix of crime and Kentucky coal-mine sociology . . . It's one of Leonard's best thrillers in years."--Entertainment Weekly
"In addition to kinetic storytelling and spot-on dialogue, Leonard has a cool wit. . . . Characters roll from scene to scene, urged on by self-interest and greed, bumping against one another and building up steam until they're smashing together in orgies of violence."--New York Times Book Review
"[Leonard's] finely honed sentences can sound as flinty/poetic as Hemingway or as hard-boiled as Raymond Chandler. His ear for the way people talk--or should--is peerless."--Detroit News
A punchy mix of crime and Kentucky coal-mine sociology . . . It s one of Leonard s best thrillers in years. --Entertainment Weekly"
With a practised ease and the craft of more than half a century of novelistic composition, Leonard works like the Picasso of crime fiction . . . "Raylan" is as close as it gets to creating the complete illusion of unmediated entertainment on the page. --San Francisco Chronicle"
In addition to kinetic storytelling and spot-on dialogue, Leonard has a cool wit. . . . Characters roll from scene to scene, urged on by self-interest and greed, bumping against one another and building up steam until they re smashing together in orgies of violence. --New York Times Book Review"
"Raylan" is Leonard s best of the 21st century good stuff from first page to last. --Los Angeles Times Book Review"
The smarter crooks give Raylan grudging respect; his fellow lawmen grant him their highest praise: You re doin a job the way we like to see it done. The same can be said of the 86-year-old Elmore Leonard. --Wall Street Journal"
Book Description:
The star of JUSTIFIED returns in a stunning new novel from 'the greatest crime writer who ever lived' [Dennis Lehane].
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