The fallen

Ace Atkins

Large print - 2017

Mississippi sheriff Quinn Colson had to admit he admired the bank robbers. A new bank was hit almost every week, and the robbers rushed in and out with such skill and precision it reminded him of raids he'd led back in Afghanistan and Iraq when he was an army ranger. In fact, it reminded him so much of the techniques in the Ranger Handbook that he couldn't help wondering if the outlaws were former Rangers themselves. And that was definitely going to be a problem. If he stood any chance of catching them, he was going to need the help of old allies, new enemies, and a lot of luck. The enemies he had plenty of. It was the allies and the luck that were going to be in woefully short supply.

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Subjects
Genres
Large print books
Detective and mystery fiction
Published
[New York] : Random House Large Print [2017]
Language
English
Main Author
Ace Atkins (author)
Edition
Large print edition
Item Description
Title from web page.
Physical Description
480 pages (large print) ; 24 cm
ISBN
9781524778323
Contents unavailable.
Review by New York Times Review

Honestly, how hard can it be to write a likable hooker? (Give her a brutish ex-husband, have some thug hold her for ransom, and take her shopping on Rodeo Drive.) But it takes real talent to write a coyote with personality. Petty is up in the Hollywood Hills, waiting for a ride, when he sees two coyotes trotting down the middle of the road, "one of them shooting him a hateful yellow glare" as it ambles past. To add insult to injury, it smirks at him when he tries to shoo it away. Even inanimate objects come to life in Lange's world: "Tumbleweeds bounded across the road, flashing in the headlights like fleeing animals." The caper plot is tidier (and more violent) than Lange's usual free-form efforts, with a solid back story about Army buddies conniving to retrieve the cash they made from stolen goods ("everything from computers and printers to microwaves and washing machines") in Afghanistan. The book is most fun, though, when it focuses on Petty's clever ruses to separate the rubes from their life's savings. Through trial and error, the con man has learned that a yellow safety vest, a baseball cap and a clipboard constitute an all-purpose disguise for real estate scams. And the telephone is his friend when he just wants to rustle up a few bucks for breakfast. Lange's bread and butter are his quick studies of colorful characters, many of whom die here in unpleasant ways. So it's only fitting when those who are still alive at the end raise their glasses on New Year's Eve in a toast "to the lucky and the unlucky, the swindlers and the swindled, the living and the dead." ?? ace atkins and his devoted readers, Tibbehah County, Miss., is no less real than Yoknapatawpha County was to Laulkner and his followers. So the first thing you do with THE FALLEN (Putnam, $27) is take a quick head count to make sure all your favorite characters are still standing. Sheriff Quinn Colson is back in office and oblivious to the adulation of his deputy, Lillie Virgil. Dances are still held at Sammy Hagar's Red Rocker Bar and Grill, gossip still traded at the Lillin' Station diner. And fear not, Lannie Hathcock is still doing land-office business at Vienna's Place (formerly known as the Booby Trap and still the "best strip club south of Memphis"), where happy hour dances are still a reasonable $20 per lap. Tibbehah has been an outlaw haven since bootlegging days, so it's a professional insult when out-of-town robbers steal $192,000 from the Pirst National Bank. But even that major crime is overshadowed when two local girls go missing and everyone fears the worst. What Atkins understands is that regional mysteries can go only so far when updating local crime patterns. It's O.K. to rob the town bank, but you can't burn it to the ground. MEDIEVAL VENICE SPREADS out her treasures for religious pilgrims in S. D. Sykes's CITY OF MASKS (Pegasus Crime, $25.95) - not the aesthetic riches of La Serenissima or the material wealth of her Doges, but the kind of treasure that buys a place in the afterlife. If they hustle, pilgrims can amass heaps of indulgences by praying at iconic shrines containing "the feet of Mary the Egyptian, the ear of St. Paul the Apostle and the molar of Goliath." Oswald de Lacy, Lord Somershill of Kent and the amiable amateur sleuth in this series, has not come to the city for the shrines. De Lacy is a gambler, and Venice has some of the most infamous dens of iniquity in Europe. But once he's lost his purse, there's no sport left but to solve the murder of Enrico Bearpark, grandson of a great Venice patriarch who suspects the boy was killed by his male lover. "A murderer will hang in this city," the old man informs de Lacy, "but a sodomite is always burned." Needless to say, this investigation is an extremely sensitive one, even for a dab hand like de Lacy. Michael connelly introduces a new sleuth in the late show (Little, Brown, $28), a detective named Renée Ballard who can almost, if not quite, lift her own weight among the tough guys in the Los Angeles Police Department. Most nights are slow on the late shift, with Ballard looking for wandering Alzheimer's patients and signing off on suicides. But this new cop has a personal mission to find her late partner's killer without undermining the last case they worked together, one that she rightly calls "big evil." Worse, she's being pilloried in the press, thanks to false information being leaked by someone at her own station. There's nothing wrong with Ballard's case or her serious work habits. It's just that she doesn't seem to be having as much fun as all the guys. ? Marilyn STASIO has covered crime fiction for the Book Review since 1988. Her column appears twice a month.

Copyright (c) The New York Times Company [July 30, 2017]
Review by Booklist Review

Atkins has had his hands full lately, jumping between novels starring Robert B. Parker's Spenser and his own, Edgar-nominated Quinn Colson series. It's back to Colson here for another well-constructed, character-rich story featuring the Tibbehah County, Mississippi, sheriff. This time, three superefficient bank robbers are working their way from bank to bank around the county (shades of the film Hell or High Water). Former Army Ranger Colson finds a Ranger-like precision in the way the robbers work and wonders if they may once have been Rangers, too. Meanwhile, the sheriff is tracking a couple of vanished teens, engaging in skirmishes with a Bible-thumping but thoroughly corrupt councilman, and falling into a new relationship. What makes this series so entertaining is its mix of country noir and comedy, combined with Atkins' ability to give us full-bodied characters on both sides of the law, whether bank robbers, stylish brothel owners, or aggrieved deputies. When all these down-home folks get to talkin', their words pack a wallop humorous, yes, but with plenty of real pathos lurking behind the wisecracks.--Ott, Bill Copyright 2017 Booklist

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

One of President Trump's most notorious off-color remarks appears in the first chapter of Edgar-finalist Atkins's outstanding seventh crime novel featuring Army Ranger turned lawman Quinn Colson (after 2016's The Innocents). Robber Rick Wilcox fires a gun in the air and threatens to grab women's privates when he and the other members of his gang walk into a small-town bank wearing Trump masks. Quinn, who has recently been returned to the position of sheriff of Mississippi's Tibbehah County, gets the news of the Trump bandits' latest strike after a visit to Vienna's Place, "a low-rent highway titty bar," where the proprietress, Fannie Hatchcock, assaulted an overzealous customer with a hammer. The robberies reunite Quinn with Jon Holliday, a fed he first encountered when Holliday was infiltrating the corrupt political organization headed by local power broker Johnny Stagg. Atkins tosses in a missing persons case-Quinn's sister Caddy, who runs an outreach program for abused women, asks him to look for two teenage girls-but the multiple plotlines don't make the story too busy. As in recent books, Atkins lightens the mood with some humor, presenting a warts-and-all portrayal of a Southern community. Author tour. Agent: Esther Newberg, ICM. (July) © Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by Kirkus Book Review

Reluctantly back in the saddle as the sheriff of Tibbehah County, Mississippi, Quinn Colson goes up against a trio of bank robbers as cunning as they are clueless.Rick Wilcox, Jonas Cord (who's borrowed his name from that of a notorious Harold Robbins hero), and their buddy Opie have robbery down to a science. They know exactly the best time to move on even modest institutions like the Jericho First National Bank, and they perform each job with military precision. While Cord waits in a disposable stolen truck, the other two enter each target armed with a stopwatch, a pair of assault rifles, two Donald Trump masks, and an unforgettable tagline: "Anyone moves and I'll grab em by the pussy." No one generally moves, and the former Marines and their junior partner drive off, ditch their ride and set it afire, and then take off to plot their next caper. Now that they've fouled his nest, Quinn would love to catch them, but he and his deputies have their hands full with the disappearance of teenagers Tamika Odum and Ana Maria Mata, county supervisor Skinner's endless complaints against Vienna's Place, the strip club Fannie Hathcock runs just outside the city limits, and the trashing of Maggie Powers' house by somebody, presumably her estranged husband, who didn't even bother to steal anything. This last crime would barely register on Quinn's radar if Maggie weren't a well-nigh forgotten friend he spent summers playing with as a child, an old acquaintance with whom his friendship might well blossom into something else. In between shared meals of catfish and whiskey, though, Quinn keeps being drawn back to Vienna's Placeand so, it turns out, do the robbers he's pursuing. Beneath the down-home Southern trappings, fans will find Atkins' customary mixture of political corruption, true-blue policing, intimate betrayals, and wholesale violence. The satisfyingly inconclusive ending of this sequel to the equally dark The Innocents (2016) puts a whole new spin on catharsis. Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

***This excerpt is from an advance uncorrected copy proof*** Copyright © 2017 Ace Atkins 1 "I guess I got the idea about the time I got fired from the Ford dealership," Rick Wilcox said. "Some big-money swinging dick had hired me to motivate the sales staff, pep talks and all that bullshit, and do a bunch of commercials. To be honest, I didn't like the whole thing. He wanted me to dress up in combat gear and read this corny-as-hell line while I saluted the viewer. It made me want to puke."             "What was the line?" Opie asked.             "Christ, Ope," Wilcox said. "Why do you want to know all of this? I mean, right now? At this very moment? I find it highly inappropriate." Wilcox looked at his watch. Nearly five minutes to the Wal-Mart delivery, the mission, and the action. He and Opie sat up front in the white Ford van, smoking Marlboro reds just like they had back in all those mud-slapped Zamindawar compounds. Cord was in back loading the AR-15s they'd modified, duct-taping the magazines back-to-back for easy loading. The guns were untraceable. The van stolen. They'd picked it off that morning at the Oak Court Mall in Memphis, switching the plates taken off a similar model.             "You got me into this, least you can tell me how it all happened," Ope said. "If you hadn't noticed, we're knee-deep in Shit City."             "Well, what if I don't want to talk about it?"             "You brought it up," Opie said. "You said it was the reason you and Crissley got into it. Since she has no fucking clue what we're doing, she wanted you to go back and beg for your old job."             "She was pissed," Wilcox said. "She thought she was going to get a cherry-red Mustang out of the deal."             "So what's the line?"             "Come on, buddy."             "Why the hell not?" "OK, OK," Wilcox said. "You really want to know? So, I'm dressed in my battle fatigues and salute the camera and say, 'At Big T Southaven Ford, we never leave a customer behind.' The fat-ass sales guys look to me and salute back. Then a flag unfurls out of my ass and the band strikes up, 'God Bless America.'"             "Damn," Opie said. "You're right. That fucking sucks. Humiliating. Are you even allowed to wear your uniform? I mean, isn't that against regulations?"             "I didn't wear my dress blues," Wilcox said. "Just some utilities. And a helmet. They made me wear a fucking helmet. It was something from Word War II."             "What about your medals?"             "They wanted me to wear them, but I told them hell no. I mean, I do have a speck of dignity somewhere I forgot. I'd run out of money. It's not like winning a Silver Star led to some financial reward. I figured if anything, it might help jumpstart my country music career, but you know how that turned out."             "I thought you sounded great," Opie said. "Kind of like a more hard-edged Kenny Chesney."             "That hurts, Ope," Wilcox said. "You know how much I hate that bald-ass pussy. If I hear that song 'Me and Tequila' one more time, I'm going to blow my fucking brains out."             Opie, freckle faced and jug-eared, grinned. That was the one thing about Ope, he could drive you crazy with his diarrhea mouth, but damn if he wasn't game for walking into hell itself with a positive attitude. He was the kind of guy who'd make jokes while you were tip-toeing though the poppy fields waiting for an IED to blow off your dick. "I remember how you hated that song when you found me down in Florida."             "Find you, hell," Wilcox said. "I fucking rescued you."             "Rescued me from pouring cocktails to women in bikinis," Opie said. "Tough gig."             "You were picking up trash on the beach and living with your grandpa," Wilcox said. "Those women all over you were cashing their Social Security checks."             Jonas Cord moved up between the two front seats of the van and looked out the windshield. They'd done a week of recon last month, hours of laying out the plan on maps, timing every mile and stashing the Kawasakis. The only thing they couldn't have predicted was the damn rain. Great falling sheets of it between where they'd parked and the target. Jonas, hard, muscular, and absolutely humorless, leaned up between them and said, "Can't see shit."             "Life ain't all blueberries and paper airplanes," Wilcox said. "We say we're going to take the hill, we take the hill. I don't care if we're ass-deep in hailstones or a monsoon."             "Well, we got a monsoon."             "Spring showers," Wilcox said. "Bring spring pussy."             "They're late," Cord said.                    "Two minutes," Wilcox said. "Get your panties out of a twist."             "What if it's longer?"             "That we adapt," Wilcox said. "Adjust. Overcome. Clint Eastwood shit. Have you forgotten everything you've learned, sergeant?"             Cord grinned and disappeared back into the back of the van. A minute later, a big gray armored truck rolled up in front of the Jericho First National bank and idled there with its headlights shining bright onto the entrance, red taillights glowing. When the guard stepped out into the rain and reached for the big sacks, Cord hit the timer on his watch.             "Did you see his commercial?" Opie said.             "Yeah, I saw it," Cord said. "Also saw him open up for a Jimmy Buffett tribute band at the dog track in West Memphis. I'd say I've seen too much."             "How was it?"             "He had one good song," Cord said. "Real tearjerker about coming home from war and finding out momma didn't know his name."             "That one was true."             Opie and Cord didn't say anything, knowing they'd gone one place that a Marine just couldn't tread. Talking about another Marine's momma. After all, there were tattoos for that and everything. As American as apple pie and a gallon of milk. Cord handed him and Opie a couple of masks to cover their faces, Donald J. Trump, and two AR-15s locked and jacked with a double-dick magazine. Cord would stay behind the wheel, he and Opie would run into the bank and make a large withdrawal.             "This looks like a nice town," Opie said, sliding the Trump mask over his face and pulling the rifle's charging pin. "White lights in those old trees on the Square. A big gazebo. Should we feel bad?"             "Nope," Wilcox said. "Life isn't fair. Look at you guys and then look at me. It should be a crime that I got to be born so damn good-looking."             Wilcox checked his watch and put on his mask, remembering last time it had been Yoda and before that Santa Claus. He liked Trump better, it'd scare the crap out of folks and would also make the news. Wilcox loved making the news. The Trump Bandits. He could see it now. The guard appeared back outside the bank and crawled up front with the driver. Two minutes later, they were gone and the diversion well in motion. A little tight but manageable. A minute later, they heard the sirens. A cop car passed, and then two more headed toward Highway 45. It almost looked like a parade.             Wilcox and Opie got out of the van and walked together in the rain. Both carried their guns in big, oversized black canvas bags. The rubbery latex mask caught in a puckered gesture, yellow fake hair flapping in the wind.             Inside, Wilcox pulled out the weapon, shot at the ceiling, and shouted, "Anyone moves and I'll grab 'em by the pussy."   --   Earlier that morning, Quinn Colson sat in a back booth of the Fillin' Station diner finishing his third cup of coffee. He signaled the waitress, Miss Mary, for a refill right before Boom Kimbrough walked through the door and took off his jacket. He'd known Boom for most of his life, the two growing up and hunting and fishing all over Tibbehah County. Boom still doing his fair share of hunting, coming in that morning dressed in an orange vest, even though he'd had his right arm blown off six years ago while serving in the Guard in Iraq. He now wore a bright silver prosthetic device that Boom bragged was good for about any job except for wiping his ass.             Mary refilled the coffee and noticed Boom. She walked back toward the kitchen for his morning sausage biscuit and tall Mountain Dew without being asked.             "I saw that big-ass Tom," Boom said. "So close, hearing that gobble-gobble call. But man. He knew I was around. Got spooked and flew back into the woods."             "He'll be back."             "You coming on or going off?"             "On," Quinn said. "Lillie's off today. Spending time with her kid."             "She still pissed at you?"             "Why?" Quinn said. "She's the one who wanted me to run. After a woman takes down a local hero, there's nowhere else for her to go but down."             "This county wouldn't have elected a woman anyway," Boom said. "Men don't have the nuts. A woman like Lillie Virgil scared the shit out of them. She talks straight and tells the truth."             "Too qualified," Quinn said. The previous fall, the acting sheriff, Lillie Virgil, had charged the longtime football coach with molesting kids, and the whole town blamed her for the fallout. Instead of the coach. The locals didn't make a hell of a lot of sense. But Lillie told Quinn that if he didn't step up and take her place, everything they'd worked for would turn to shit.             "And they settle for your broke-down ass."             Quinn saluted him with the coffee mug and leaned back as Mary slid two sausage biscuits before Boom. The woman had been waiting tables at the Filling Station since Quinn was a kid, back when his Uncle Hamp had been sheriff and took visitors every morning at the same booth. More business getting done at the diner than at the office where Quinn had been sheriff for nearly five years, except for a year or so where he had been voted out of office. He was dressed in a stiff khaki uniform shirt, crisp Levi's, and polished cowboy boots. His Beretta 9mm rested on his belt and his uncle's old rancher coat hung by the front door.             "Listen," Boom said. "I don't want to cause no trouble. But ever since the first of the year, old man Skinner been riding my ass. He wants me gone from the County Barn and he wants to put in his own people."             "Where'd you hear that?"             "From Skinner," Boom said. "That motherfucker been shitting on everything since he took over the county supervisors. You know what he was like before he retired and said he was out of the life, letting Stagg run things. He's too old and too mean to do Jericho any good."             "Don't tell him that," Quinn said. "First of the year, Skinner announced to the supervisors and county employees that he intended to make Tibbehah a more godly place. Just like it'd been when he was a boy. Leaving out the parts about the Klan, killings, and moonshine wars. But that's exactly the kind of horseshit people around here believe and trust."             "And how'd you get elected?"             "Nobody else wanted the job," Quinn said. "Including Lillie, if she was really honest about it."             "How's your momma and them?"             "Fine."             "Daddy?"             "Hadn't heard a word since he shagged ass."             "Ophelia?"             Quinn drank some coffee and watched Boom shove most of an entire biscuit in his mouth and chew. He watched him eat, not wanting to discuss a good woman who'd been a terrible match for him. Boom knowing full well that Ophelia Bundren had once thrown a steak knife at Quinn's head, barely missing. With his damn family and county politics, he'd had enough crazy in his life. "How about we go look for that big-ass Tom this weekend and not speak a word about women or politics?" Quinn said. "Later I need to burn a brush pile before the weather turns. We can smoke some cigars and tell lies."             The Fillin' Station was packed that morning filled with old farmers, fancy town women, camo-covered hunters, and local politicians glad-handing. Three old men sat at the closest table, all in tall-crown ball caps, smoking cigarettes and downing cheap coffee. One of them muttering something about goddamn China, bringing to mind the late Mr. Jim, who'd run the barber shop, and Judge Blanton, who fiddled with local affairs until his untimely death. The old diner had been a gas station well before Quinn was born, the linoleum floor unchanged, propane heaters glowing a bright orange against the walls under endless rows of framed hometown heroes and yellowed news. Somewhere up there, young Quinn had survived ten days in a national forest, his father had jumped a dozen Ford Pintos, and sometime in recent memory he'd graduated Ranger training and gotten a Purple Heart in Iraq. All that was now as yellowed as the rest.             "Will you talk to Skinner?"             Quinn nodded.             "We still on for supper at Miss Jean's?"                     Quinn nodded again. "Fried chicken," he said. "And collard greens."             "It's good to have you back, man."             Quinn nodded. He drank some coffee and listened to the old men talk about how things used to be better when they were young.             Boom leaned toward Quinn and said, "Not for my people."             "Y'all weren't happy working the cotton fields at gunpoint?"             "I think Skinner will do everything in his power to turn back the clock."             "He's too old," Quinn said. "It won't last. Nobody can stop how far things have gone."             "Evil don't die," Boom said. "Least with Johnny Stagg, you knew where you stood."             "How about we not talk about Stagg, either?'             "No Stagg," Boom said. "No Ophelia. Times do change."             "If you ask my sister, she'll say it's all part of God's divine plan," Quinn said.             "But you don't believe it?"             "How about you ask me when we both get old?"             "Too late," Boom said. "That clock sure is a bitch."             Quinn rubbed his weathered, lean face. Damn if he wasn't coming up on forty and no one had bothered to tell him. Excerpted from The Fallen by Ace Atkins 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.