"Elmore Leonard can write circles around almost anybody active in the crime novel today."
--New York Times Book Review
With more than forty novels to his credit and still going strong, the legendary Elmore Leonard has well earned the title, "America's greatest crime writer" (Newsweek). And U.S. Marshal Raylan Givens (Pronto, Riding the Rap, Fire in the Hole) is one of Leonard's most popular creations, thanks in part to the phenomenal success of the hit TV series "Justified." Leonard's Raylan shines a spotlight once again on the dedicated, if somewhat trigger-happy lawman, this time in his familiar but not particularly cozy milieu of Harlan County, Kentucky, where the drug dealing Crowe brothers are branching out into the human body parts business. Suspenseful, darkly wry and riveting, and crackling with Leonard's trademark electric dialogue, Raylan is prime Grand Master Leonard as you have always loved him and always will.
About the Author :
Elmore Leonard wrote more than forty books during his long career, including the bestsellers Raylan, Tishomingo Blues, Be Cool, Get Shorty, and Rum Punch, as well as the acclaimed collection When the Women Come Out to Dance, which was a New York Times Notable Book. Many of his books have been made into movies, including Get Shorty and Out of Sight. The short story "Fire in the Hole," and three books, including Raylan, were the basis for the FX hit show Justified. Leonard received the Lifetime Achievement Award from PEN USA and the Grand Master Award from the Mystery Writers of America. He died in 2013.
Review :
[Elmore Leonard] has created his own fictional world that we are privileged to visit now and then.... Leonard commands such a broad spectrum of fans that he might justifiably be called America's Author. However, titles matter little; what truly counts is his ability to deliver a capital story splendidly told. Readers, rejoice! The beat goes on." - San Diego Union-Tribune on ROAD DOGS
"A master of narrative." - The New Yorker
"Raylan is Leonard's best of the 21st century--good stuff from first page to last." - Los Angeles Times Book Review
"The smarter crooks give Raylan grudging respect; his fellow lawmen grant him their highest praise: 'You're doin' a job the way we like to see it done.' The same can be said of the 86-year-old Elmore Leonard." - Wall Street Journal
"[Leonard's] finely honed sentences can sound as flinty/poetic as Hemingway or as hard-boiled as Raymond Chandler. His ear for the way people talk--or should--is peerless." - Detroit News
"There is no greater writer of crime fiction than Elmore Leonard, and no one who has more resplendent energy. . . . Like pretty well every Leonard novel, Raylan is a delight." - The Guardian (UK)
"A punchy mix of crime and Kentucky coal-mine sociology . . . It's one of Leonard's best thrillers in years." - Entertainment Weekly
"With a practised ease and the craft of more than half a century of novelistic composition, Leonard works like the Picasso of crime fiction . . . Raylan is as close as it gets to creating the complete illusion of unmediated entertainment on the page." - San Francisco Chronicle
"In addition to kinetic storytelling and spot-on dialogue, Leonard has a cool wit. . . . Characters roll from scene to scene, urged on by self-interest and greed, bumping against one another and building up steam until they're smashing together in orgies of violence." - New York Times Book Review
"Jazzy prose that occasionally lets go of 'proper usage' is Leonard's trademark. He's a stylist of forward motion, placing narrative acceleration above inconveniences like pronouns and helping verbs. . . . In addition to kinetic storytelling and spot-on dialogue, Leonard has a cool wit. . . . Characters roll from scene to scene, urged on by self- interest and greed, bumping against one another and building up steam until they're smashing together in orgies of violence." - New York Times Book Review on RAYLAN
"Raylan is Leonard's best of the 21st century--good stuff from first page to last." - Los Angeles Times Book Review on RAYLAN
"I haven't seen Justified but you don't have to have seen it either to enjoy the low-key dramatic splendors of Elmore Leonard's new novel, Raylan. . . . With a practised ease and the craft of more than half a century of novelistic composition, Leonard works like the Picasso of crime fiction, deftly sketching in his characters by means of carefully shaped dialogue and keenly detailed physical action . . . Reading his pages is like filling up on chocolates that are good for you. Raylan is as close as it gets to creating the complete illusion of unmediated entertainment on the page." - San Francisco Chronicle Book Review on RAYLAN
"The smarter crooks give Raylan grudging respect; his fellow lawmen grant him their highest praise: 'You're doin' a job the way we like to see it done.' The same can be said of the 86-year-old Elmore Leonard, who with Raylan has written his most entertaining book in years." - Wall Street Journal on RAYLAN
"Leonard writes with high style, great energy, unflappable cool and a jubilant love of the game. As ever, his scorn for fussy prose is best expressed through his own superbly lean locutions." - New York Times on ROAD DOGS
"A punchy mix of crime and Kentucky coal-mine sociology . . . It's one of Leonard's best thrillers in years." - Entertainment Weekly on RAYLAN
"A superb craftsman . . . his writing is pure pleasure." - Los Angeles Times Book Review
"Elmore Leonard can write circles around almost anybody active in the crime novel today." - New York Times Book Review
"Elmore Leonard is our greatest crime novelist...the best in the business." - The Washington Post