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Killshot

Audiobook
0 of 1 copy available
Wait time: About 8 weeks
0 of 1 copy available
Wait time: About 8 weeks

"Masterful...gemlike...bone-chilling." Los Angeles Times Book Review

An AUDIOFILE Earphones Award Winner

Ironworker Wayne Colson and his spirited wife Carmen are witnesses to a shakedown scam - witnesses who must be eliminated. Enter Armand Degas, aka Blackbird, the brains of the operation, and his partner Richie Nix, an ex-con whose highest goal is to rob a bank in every state. A lively chase ensues when the Colsons enter the Federal Witness Security Program with two bumbling but determined killers on their trail. With its dead-on dialogue, memorable characters, and absolute authenticity, this is one of Elmore Leonard's all time great novels.

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    • Publisher's Weekly

      April 1, 1989
      Crime fiction doesn't get any better than Leonard's new thriller, which, while it breaks no new ground, is a welcome retreat to his more direct style of classics such as 52 Pickup and Unknown Man #89 . When Carmen Colson and her ironworker husband Wayne stumble onto an extortion scheme run by Armand Degas, half Ojibway Indian, half French Canadian hit man, and his temporary partner Richie Nix, a talkative sociopath, the two killers set out to eliminate them, hiding out with Nix's girlfriend Donna, a former prison guard who collects stuffed animals and believes that Elvis is alive. In detailing the killers' relentless pursuit of the terrified couple, Leonard builds suspense with a deft, master hand, inducing an instant--and sustained--response of sweating hands and a racing heart. Even the most jaded reader will be swept along on the roller coaster of impending violence punctuated by heart-stopping crises. As always, Leonard writes with a natural ear for offbeat speech and a terrific sense of locale, moving the action from Toronto to Detroit and into Michigan and Ohio, telling the story almost totally through the thoughts and dialogue of the characters. In the Colsons, Leonard presents a more mature and realistic portrayal of a relationship than he has in the past, and he stirs up an uncomfortable fondness for the cruel but mellowing hit man Degas, all the while drawing the reader deeply into these ordinary lives. A bravura performance. Literary Guild dual main selection.

    • AudioFile Magazine
      If Elmore Leonard is a high-performance car, Ron McLarty is the skilled driver who can handle it. He understands the determined independence of Leonard's classic heroes, as well as their earnestness, humor, and essential decency. He also seems to delight in the singularity of Leonard's villains. They may be bad, but they're human, not monsters, and as such, they're thoroughly recognizable. Here, real estate agent Carmen Colson and her ironworker husband, Wayne, unwittingly get caught in the middle of an extortion scheme and end up the targets of a couple of low-end killers. In McLarty's reading, each of these characters, and several others, is fully realized, fully alive. M.O. (c) AudioFile 2004, Portland, Maine
    • AudioFile Magazine
      No one can really equal Leonard's ear for lowbrow criminal dialogue and behavior--or, for that matter, his ear for lower-class American accents. And Ryder Strong warms to the sizable cast of harebrained characters he must portray in this violent story. Early in his narration, Strong seems hesitant, but as the plot thickens and the crime duo of a gum-snapping punk and a taciturn half-breed follow their absurd and bloody path of robbery and revenge, Strong's voice and energy keep pace. By the last track, listeners will find they have experienced a classic American story of crime, a satirical IN COLD BLOOD shot by the light of a convenience store sign. D.J.B. (c) AudioFile 2006, Portland, Maine
    • AudioFile Magazine
      A series of bizarre events thrusts a blue-collar couple into the dangerous world of small-time hoods. The work is quintessential Leonard, especially in its detailed description of the criminal mind, both professional and amateur. Bruce Boxleitner's narration is sharp and compelling. The voice he assumes for the middle-aged wife is a bit too self-aware at time. But otherwise the reader shifts between characters adroitly and gives the story good treatment. G.D. (c)AudioFile, Portland, Maine
    • AudioFile Magazine
      Bruce Boxleitner here delivers a splendid reading. The page-turner concerns the pursuit of a husband and wife hiding ineffectively in the federal Witness Protection program. That Boxleitner, the hoarse star of TV's "Babylon 5," seeks an outlet for his aspirations as a serious performer does not surprise. That he can squeeze any expression at all from his ravaged vocal apparatus suggests tremendous effort on his part; that he has enriched his text with superbly delineated characterizations, that he has infused the entire work with a sense of danger and even plucked gems of humor out of it must be due in part to expert guidance from producer Deborah Raffin. Y.R. Winner of AUDIOFILE Earphones Award (c)AudioFile, Portland, Maine

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