G-man A Bob Lee Swagger novel

Stephen Hunter, 1946-

Large print - 2017

When Bob Lee Swagger, now in Idaho, finally sells the land he owned in Arkansas, the developers begin to tear down the old homestead and uncover a steel case hidden in the foundation. The case contains a batch of 1934 memorabilia a much-corroded FBI badge, a .45 automatic preserved in cosmoline, a gun clip, and a cryptic diagram, all belonging to Charles Swagger. Bob never knew his grandfather Charles, who died before he was he born, and his father Earl refuses to mention him. Fascinated by this new information, Bob is driven to find out what happened to his grandfather, and why his own father, whom he worshiped, never spoke of Charles. But as he investigates further, Bob learns that someone is following him, someone with his own obsession ...of finding out what Charles Swagger left behind.

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Subjects
Genres
Thrillers (Fiction)
Large print books
Published
[New York] : Random House Large Print 2017.
Language
English
Main Author
Stephen Hunter, 1946- (author)
Edition
First large print edition
Physical Description
642 pages (large print) ; 23 cm
ISBN
9781524756185
Contents unavailable.
Review by Booklist Review

*Starred Review* Just as Hunter brilliantly used parallel narratives in The 47th Samurai (2007) to follow master Vietnam sniper Bob Lee Swagger's investigation into how a revered samurai sword came to be in his father Earl's possession, so in the latest Swagger novel, he employs another found artifact a strongbox containing, among other things, a federal lawman's badge to set Bob Lee on the trail of his long-dead grandfather Charles, about whom Bob Lee knows nothing. That federal badge leads Bob Lee to the revelation that Charles, in the thirties, had been a G-man in Chicago, engaged in the hunt for John Dillinger, Pretty Boy Floyd, and Baby Face Nelson, public enemies one through three. Jumping seamlessly between past and present, Hunter re-creates the fascinating Depression-era story of how bank robbers became populist heroes, offering in the process a truly compelling character in Charles, a man burdened not only by his inflexible sense of honor but also by a secret residing deep in his soul. And, of course, there's a modern story, too: Bob Lee is being tracked by a bizarre crew of crooks who know about the strongbox and think it's the key to a fortune. Lots going on here, but Hunter fits the parts as snugly as Bob Lee reassembling a rifle. Yes, we know Hunter writes gun violence as realistically and meticulously as anyone in the business, but what we forget is that he builds character with equal precision. This is an outstanding thriller on every level.--Ott, Bill Copyright 2017 Booklist

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

Hunter's outstanding 10th Bob Lee Swagger novel (after 2014's Sniper's Honor) takes readers back to the gangster days of the 1930s. In the present, Swagger investigates the murky past of his grandfather, Charles, a hard, taciturn man who spent most of his life as the sheriff of Polk County, Ark. Flashbacks reveal that Charles was also a skilled marksman who took a leading role in the Justice Department's 1934 manhunt for bank robbers John Dillinger, Pretty Boy Floyd, and, most importantly, the frighteningly violent Les Gillis (aka Baby Face Nelson). The problem for Swagger is the lack of any record of Charles ever working as a G-man, though there's ample rumor and hearsay that he was deeply immersed in the campaign to hunt down and kill the outlaws. Hunter's skilled ear for dialogue and idiom has never been better, and some of the action scenes-especially a chapter describing the famous robbery of the Merchants National Bank in South Bend, Ind., on June 30, 1934-are as elegant as they are disturbing. Eight-city author tour. Agent: Esther Newberg, ICM. (May) © Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by Library Journal Review

At 71, Bob Lee Swagger no longer has the physical skills that made him a sniper and expert shooter, so he turns to investigating the mystery of his grandfather Charles's life. In tearing down the family home in Arkansas, Bob finds a lockbox containing a .45 pistol and a crude map. Much research and finally a hidden memoir reveal that Charles had played a brief but major role in the nascent FBI's 1934 pursuit of John -Dillinger, Bonnie and Clyde, and especially the notorious killer, Baby Face Nelson. As in the earlier Sniper's Honor, Hunter alternates between 1934 and the present, carefully using historical events and people while inserting Charles, also a veteran sniper, to train the feds in the necessary shooting skills. The verisimilitude of his Thirties portrayal vividly shows the Depression-era appeal of bank robbers vs. the government. VERDICT In this ninth entry in the "Bob Lee -Swagger" series, Hunter displays his trademark skills in character development, a fascination with firearms, pulp fiction dialog, and an action-packed plot. Fans of Lee Child or Tom Clancy may join the many Swagger followers in enjoying this tale of violence and moral anxiety. [See Prepub Alert, 11/21/16.]-Roland Person, formerly with Southern Illinois Univ. Lib., Carbondale © Copyright 2017. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

(c) Copyright Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
Review by Kirkus Book Review

Hunter (I, Ripper, 2015, etc.) continues the Swagger family saga, with Bob Lee lured from retirement after a steel box secreted by his grandfather Charles is discovered on the family's old Arkansas homestead.In the box are a Colt .45 government-model pistol, an odd machined cylinder, an FBI Special Agent badge, a $1,000 bill, and a map. It will all trace back to 1934 and gangsters Homer Van Meter, Pretty Boy Floyd, Baby Face Nelson, and John Dillinger, who were robbing every bank in sight. Bob's enigmatic grandfather Charles, a World War I hero, left his duties as Polk County sheriff to serve the federal Division of Investigation, the FBI's forerunner, in Chicago, and the book alternates between his adventures in 1934 and his grandson's quest to figure out what happened. The action takes off as Charles, while sending more than one bad guy to the morgue, turns the division's lawyers and accountants into shoot-to-kill street agents. There are regular shifts to Baby Face with surprising insight into his personality and marriage. While wanting to know why Charles buried that box, Bob Lee also sets out to find out why his grandfather spent only a few months with the division"Everything about this old bastard was thin"leading to two startling revelations. Hunter's handling of a bank-robbery gun battle and later the bloody takedown of Baby Face are you-are-there choreographed. However, it's Charles' manipulating the mob, corrupt cops, and publicity hound Melvin Purvis while dodging Tommy guns, .45s, and the deadly Monitor that keeps the pages turning, letting Bob Lee's pursuit of Charles' history fade to a sideshowat least until Bob deciphers the map and is confronted by the hillbilly Mafia. Fans of Hunter's Swagger family legend will be locked and loaded for more. Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

***This excerpt is from an advance uncorrected copy proof*** Copyright © 2017 Stephen Hunter PRELUDE   EAST OF BLUE EYE, ARKANSAS   The present   The blades of the graders contoured the land to spec. They rounded hills, felled and flattened woods, scoured underbrush, crushed rocks, filled hollows, collapsed ravines. Nothing but raw earth remained. What had been complex became plain, according to the latest large-project construction principles. Streets had been staked out, while sewers and wiring and cable were planted in furrows. Then the houses would spring up, rows of them, all alike, but soon to be differentiated by their new owners. It was progress--or, at least, development--it was growth, it was capitalism, it was hope. It couldn't be stopped, so mourning was pointless. This land had sustained one family for close to two centuries, first claimed in the late 1780s by a quiet couple from over the mountains, where the war was just finishing. They gave no account of themselves. They and theirs stayed for seven generations, and for that whole time they were steady, solid; they went to church, they gave to charity, they did their share in emergency or crisis. But more, it turned out they were a family of heroes. Their boys learned to hunt; they learned the hunter's patience, his stoicism, his courage, his mercy, his honor. They had a gift for the firearm, and more than a few of them took that gift off to war. Some made it back, some didn't. Some became officers of the law, for in those days that too called for the shooter's talent. They shot for blood many a time, and, again, some made it back and some didn't. They were all gone now. The last of them had sold off the place for a substantial amount and fled, not wanting to see what was done to his home- stead and the homestead of his ancestors. Now the contouring was all but finished. Only the old house remained, atop a hillock that dominated the spread, a comfortable, rambling joint that had been added to over the decades until it practically made no sense at all. The hill was too much for the graders and so the company brought in a big Cat excavator, the 326F L model, a machine classified medium by weight, and set it loose, under the guidance of a professional genius named Ralph. From afar, it looked like some kind of Jurassic ritual. A yellow Tyrannosaurus rex had downed a Bronto or a Stegosaurus and now fed on soft underbelly. The knuckle boom of Ralph's big Cat pierced and ripped and tore, its bucket armed with side cutters and teeth, taking down walls and floors swiftly, in a single day reducing what had been a large house to a large pile of rubble. The next day, using the bucket as an artist would a brush, Ralph cleared the shattered remnants of two centuries' worth of history, loading them into the trucks, which hauled them off to the landfill. Finally, on the third day, only the foundation remained, and he directed the bucket to continue its feast of destruction, smashing the stones into smaller chunks, then scooping them up for disposal. It was all going according to plan--until it wasn't. The managers saw him stop, pop the big machine out of gear, turn off its hydraulics, then leap from the yellow house, dash along the tread and swing down off the boom, pass under the knuckle, and reach the bucket, which was frozen in place on a particularly large chunk of foundation that would not shatter according to plan. They approached and swiftly became an inspection committee. "Something wrong, Ralph?" "You didn't bust a pump or lose a piston?" "Did you spring a hydraulic leak there, Ralph?" Of course all this really meant but one thing: how much is this going to cost us?   But Ralph was on his knees, studying on the joinery between the bucket's teeth--those hard T. rex fangs--and earth. "I felt something," he said. "You know, you get so you can read the vibrations. It wasn't stone, dirt, pipe--nothing like that." He poked, prodded, messed around with a shovel. "What'd it feel like?" he was asked. "Some kind of metal. I don't know, a sheet or a--" He stopped, spotting something, leaped forward, examined more closely, inserted the shovel's blade, dug, pried, cleared, sought leverage, and finally, with a spray of dirt like an explosion, exposed something from the Great Beneath. "Jesus," he said, now pulling the treasure free, "it's a strongbox of some kind." It was, looking like the sort of thing carried by Wells Fargo and subject to larceny by men in dusters and hats, with bandannas across their faces and Winchesters in their hands. The committee gathered around. Curiosity now overcame their need, if only for a bit, to stay on schedule. "Maybe it's full of gold," somebody remarked. Ralph, whose genius was practical, not speculative, smacked at the padlock a few times with his shovel, expertly driving the corner tip of its blade under the locking hasp, and the hasp's old metal couldn't bear the spike in pressure and broke open on the third blow. The committee gathered closer as he tossed the busted lock away and pulled the lid back on the strongbox's rusted hinges. The contents were initially disappointing. A number of objects wrapped tightly in heavy canvas, loosely secured by disintegrating tape, their outlines muffled by the heavy swaddling. Ralph popped a Kershaw knife from the pocket of his jeans, where it had been clipped, cut the tape, and used the point of the blade to push through the mass of canvas. It gave way to an oily cloth wrapping, under which the thing, shed of its canvas raiments, assumed a familiar shape. At last, he got this final oily wrapping away from it and held it out, gleaming in the sun, for all to see. "It's a damned pistol," he proclaimed. "It's an old .45 automatic," someone who knew said. "Old?" someone else said. "Hell, it looks brand-new!" They were otherwise stunned into silence. Finally someone said, "Man, I bet that bad boy has a story to tell." Excerpted from G-Man by Stephen Hunter All rights reserved by the original copyright owners. Excerpts are provided for display purposes only and may not be reproduced, reprinted or distributed without the written permission of the publisher.