The accomplice

Curtis Jackson, 1975-

Book - 2024

"Author S.A. Cosby meets Netflix blockbuster Money Heist in the first novel by New York Times best-selling author and global superstar Curtis "50 Cent" Jackson, who confidently charts the journeys of Nia Robinson, a Texas ranger who is on the hunt for wily bank robber Desmond Roberts in this high-tension, fast-moving page turner about power, equity, and revenge"--

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Subjects
Genres
Detective and mystery fiction
Western fiction
Thrillers (Fiction)
Novels
Published
New York, NY : Amistad 2024.
Language
English
Main Author
Curtis Jackson, 1975- (author)
Other Authors
Aaron Philip Clark (author)
Edition
First edition
Physical Description
264 pages ; 24 cm
ISBN
9780063312906
9780063312913
Contents unavailable.
Review by Booklist Review

In his debut thriller, Grammy--winning rapper Curtis 50 Cent Jackson joins forces with crime writer and screenwriter Aaron Philip Clark to lead readers through an action-packed tale taking place in Texas in 2004. Nia Adams is a Black, queer, by-the-book Texas Ranger who constantly fights against racism and sexism on the job. Desmond Bell is an ex-marine turned killer and "treasure hunter" with his own troubles, who steals something very significant to one of Texas' top political families, the Duchamps. Bartholomew Katz is a contract killer hired to track their stolen goods down using any means necessary. Their paths all cross when Nia is brought in on a bank-robbery case that leads to Desmond's past, what's behind the Duchamps' power, and a whole lot of secrets. Told from multiple points of view, The Accomplice reads like a television show; the action scenes are plenty, and the pace is quick. While the twists are predictable, the plot is still thoroughly enjoyable. And while this works solidly on its own, the ending does leave things open enough for a sequel.HIGH-DEMAND BACKSTORY: Rapper, actor, producer, and entrepreneur Jackson's multitudes of fans will follow him on his first foray into crime fiction.

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

In rapper 50 Cent's dynamic fiction debut (after the memoir Hustle Smarter, Hustle Harder), Vietnam-vet-turned-thief Desmond Bell breaks into the oldest bank in Texas and steals $2 million in Spanish gold and a slave manifest implicating the Duchamps, one of the Lone Star State's wealthiest families, as beneficiaries of the transatlantic slave trade. If the details of the document got out, they would tarnish the family's reputation and torpedo the presidential campaign of scion Corbin Duchamp. Hot on Desmond's heels is Nia Adams, the first Black woman sworn into the Texas Rangers, who bears her own physical and psychological scars from the line of duty. Meanwhile, the Duchamps have sent sadistic investigator Bartholomew Katz after Desmond in hopes of retrieving their property. Much of the taut narrative is dedicated to Nia and Katz's pursuit of Desmond, which remains gripping all the way to the bang-up finale. A subplot about a fraternity of thieves who recover priceless artifacts with complex histories nicely sets up a potential sequel. Fans of John Wick--style action thrillers will not be disappointed. (Sept.)

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

Rapper and entrepreneur Jackson, a.k.a. 50 Cent, has cowritten urban lit titles, a children's book, and, most recently, an autobiography/self-help guide (Hustle Harder, Hustle Smarter). This time he joins veteran crime fiction writer Aaron Philip Clark (Blue Like Me) for a mystery. Nia Adams, the first Black woman Texas Ranger, has already retired when her protégé makes a surprise visit with news of a crime that is eerily similar to a decades-old unsolved robbery and homicide that changed the course of Nia's career. Readers go back in time as Nia investigates the crimes while experiencing obstacles and difficulties that often arise for her, a Black woman in a predominantly white and male organization. She must also balance personal relationships with her profession as a Texas Ranger. As she gets closer to solving the crimes, she is faced with decisions that challenge her duties and values of family and safety, and some involve corruption at the highest levels too. VERDICT A unique crime with an appealing motive, great character development, and engrossing storytelling sustain this novel, but loose ends at its finale might not satisfy some readers. Will appeal to fans of Attica Locke, S.A. Cosby, and Joe Lansdale.--George Lichman

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

Desmond Bell, a traumatized Black Vietnam veteran turned professional thief, runs afoul of a powerful Texas family after acquiring proof that it profited from the trans-Atlantic slave trade in this novel by Jackson, aka rapper 50 Cent. Bell has in his possession a damning slave manifesto, which he lifted along with $2 million in Spanish gold from a hidden safe in an old bank in Waxahachie. His blackmail demands are that the right-wing, oil-rich white Duchamp family pay him $5 million for the document--and cancel shifty son Corbin's run for president. That puts Bell in the crosshairs of Katz, a nihilistic killer working for the family. Enter Nia Adams, the first Black female Texas Ranger, who has to contend with not only Katz and company but also the underlying bigotry around her. Everyone has secrets. Nia is a closeted lesbian in a long relationship. Bell's real name is Al Bouchard, which he changed after black-market dealings in Vietnam made him a marked man. After his Vietnamese wife was killed in a car crash that was meant to kill him, he faked his death and that of his daughter, Amara, who also survived the crash, and escaped to the U.S. as Desmond Bell. There, his "atomic" anger and remorse drive him to coldblooded acts of violence that cost him an ally in Nia. Written with the excellent crime fiction veteran Clark, Jackson's first work of adult fiction is an assured, classically rendered effort. Though the twisty ending is wobbly and the novel lacks the depth of Southern gothics by Attica Locke and S.A. Cosby, it has its own special qualities--including a soundtrack in which patriotic Vietnamese hymns get swapped on a karaoke machine for the author's "P.I.M.P." A satisfying thriller that knows its way around the form. Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.