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Rocks Beat Paper

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
In this “highly entertaining” heist thriller, there is no honor among jewel thieves (The Toronto Star).
 
A phone call brought Wilson and nine other men to a job in New York. At first, he couldn’t see a way to make the heist work, but the score—millions of dollars in diamonds—motivated him to try. Wilson came up with a plan he knew would work . . . until the inside man got killed and took the job with him.
 
With no way inside, the crew walks away without the diamonds. Now, on his own, Wilson is free to execute the job his way. He sets a con in motion that should run as predictably as a trail of dominoes—except the con doesn’t rely on inanimate tiles, it relies on people. And when Wilson pushes all the pieces across the board, he finds that there are other players making their own moves against him. No one is willing to walk away because the job is about more than money. The job is about diamonds. And in this game, rocks beat paper every time.
 
“Wilson is a captivating character: cold, merciless, magnetic, and honest about the world he willingly inhabits . . . Combining the intense grit of Richard Stark’s Parker series with the amorality of Jim Thompson’s work, Knowles once again delivers a heady brew of tough-guy dialogue, byzantine plots, [and] vibrant characters.” —Publishers Weekly (starred review)
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    • Publisher's Weekly

      Starred review from May 8, 2017
      Wilson, the antihero of this fantastic hardboiled criminal noir from Knowles (The Buffalo Job), is a straight shooter; that is, as a cohort tells him, “People seem to have a habit of getting shot around you, and you are usually the one holding the gun.” Wilson, a career criminal, has survived five brutal novels thus far, each page laden with violence, schemes, double crosses, backstabbers, and more besides. This tense thriller draws him into that most classic of criminal capers: a diamond heist. After a key player is killed, the job is called off, but Wilson decides to do it anyway, on his own terms. Wilson is a captivating character: cold, merciless, magnetic, and honest about the world he willingly inhabits. “The games we play are never fair and they never end clean,” he observes. “They just end.” Combining the intense grit of Richard Stark’s Parker series with the amorality of Jim Thompson’s work, Knowles once again delivers a heady brew of tough-guy dialogue, byzantine plots, vibrant characters, and a protagonist who believes only in “an I for an I.”

    • Kirkus

      February 15, 2017
      The fifth recorded caper for the thief who, imitating Richard Stark's Parker, is known only as Wilson dangles a fortune in jewels in front of him and an ill-fated crew.David Phillips and his brother-in-law, Alvin, offer a nifty target for a heist: Mendelson Jewels, where David works as a jewelry designer for Saul Mendelson, who's become a little absent-minded and more than a little paranoid as he's gotten on in years. During one special weekend, Mendelson will be holding a million dollars' worth of sparklers waiting for the right personnel to grab, and Vin believes he's assembled just the right personnel: strong-armed Johnny, a racist ex-con, and his buddy Tony; a pair of safecrackers both named Diego; Elliot, a hacker who can get inside the firm's computer system; Monica, an African-American driver; and Wilson (The Buffalo Job, 2014, etc.) and his friend Miles. The group's original plan, which already sounds pretty complicated, is aborted when two apparently indispensable members of the crew are killed in a car crash, leaving Wilson, who always thought nine people were too many for the job in the first place, to try his luck together with Monica and Miles. When this second attempt is stymied as well, Wilson realizes that he's up against a rival thief just as smart and ruthless as he is, somebody who's been playing him from the beginning. As in Jeffery Deaver's very different thrillers, identifying the other thief doesn't end the complications. Neither does killing the other thief. The tension will ease only when breathless readers turn the very last page. Knowles builds for impact and speed. Even the ruthless hero's matter-of-fact reflections on his felonious craft ("The games we play are never fair and they never end clean. They just end") achieve a truly baleful economy.

      COPYRIGHT(2017) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

    • Library Journal

      April 1, 2017

      The thief known only as Wilson is offered a tantalizing target for a heist--a million dollars' worth of jewels. Two attempts to nab the gems are stymied, and it becomes apparent another talented and hard-nosed thief has also targeted Wilson's prize. With its ruthless antihero, high-octane action, and spare prose, this fifth series outing (after Never Play Another Man's Game) is a capable caper novel for fans of Richard Stark's "Parker" mysteries and Garry Disher's "Wyatt" series.--ACT

      Copyright 2017 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

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