
Product Summary

| Hot cars, gun molls, speakeasies, bank robbers and murder are the game in this powerfully entertaining story from Elmore Leonard, the undisputed master of the crime novel. Set in Oklahoma during the 1930s, The Hot Kid introduces Carl Webster, one of the coolest lawmen ever to draw on a fugitive felon. At 21, Carl Webster's on his way to beconing the most famous Deputy US Marshall in America. He's shot and killer motorious bank robber Emmet Long and is now tracking Jack Belmont, the no-good son of an oil millionaire with dreams of becoming Public Enemy Number One. |
The ambitions and desires of three men collide in this felicitous blend of Western and crime novel set in the 1930s. Carlos "Carl" Webster, an up-and-coming US marshal and crack shot, pursues Jack Belmont, an oilman's bad-seed son who aspires to become America's most notorious gangster; meanwhile, reporter Tony Antonelli writes up their exploits for True Detective Mystery magazine.
Praise
"Whatever the author wants THE HOT KID to mean, its hottest kid turns out to be the one doing the writing." - Janet Maslin 05/02/2005 Kirkus Reviews
"Leonard's gentle epic is as restorative as a month in the country." 02/15/2005 Publishers Weekly
"Leonard's 40th novel...features characterizations so deft and true you can smell the hair oil on the dudes and the perfume on the dames....[I]t's all pure Leonard, and that means it's pure terrific." (starred review) 03/28/2005 Booklist
"As always, Leonard's prose seems effortless, his dialogue is perfect, and his humor is as dry as a moonshine martini....[A] terrific pleasure." - Keir Graff 03/15/2005 Literary Review
"Relentlessly stripped-down dialogue, laconic, fast and funny....Leonard has produced an affectionate, unsentimental history of bad times past. Racy, well-remembered, irresistible." - Philip Oakes September 2005
Chapter OneCarlos Webster was fifteen the day he witnessed the robbery and killing at Deering's drugstore. This was in the fall of 1921 in Okmulgee, Oklahoma.He told Bud Maddox, the Okmulgee chief of police, he had driven a load of cows up to the yard at Tulsa and by the time he got back it was dark. He said he left the truck and stock trailer across the street from Deering's and went inside to get an ice cream cone. When he identified one of the robbers as Emmett Long, Bud Maddox said, "Son, Emmett Long robs banks, he don't bother with drugstores no more." Carlos had been raised on hard work and respect for his elders. He said, "I could be wrong," knowing he wasn't. They brought him over to police headquarters in the courthouse to look at photos. He pointed to Emmett Long staring at him from a $500 wanted bulletin and picked the other one, Jim Ray Monks, from mug shots. Bud Maddox said, "You're positive, huh?" and asked Carlos which one wa |
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