To use our price comparison to get the cheapest price, please click on the "Find the Cheapest Price" button located above for Caught Stealing by Charlie Huston (ISBN-10: 0792736672, ISBN-13: 9780792736677). At this time we have not yet written a review for Caught Stealing by Charlie Huston (ISBN-10: 0792736672, ISBN-13: 9780792736677). Please continue to keep checking back to this page as we are constantly adding reviews. Summaries and Customer Reviews are supplied by Amazon.com It’s three thousand miles from the green fields of glory, where Henry “call me Hank” Thompson once played California baseball, to the Lower East Side of Manhattan, where the tenements are old, the rents are high, and the drunks are dirty. But now Hank is here, working as a bartender and taking care of a cat named Bud who is surely going to get him killed.
It begins when Hank’s neighbor, Russ, has to leave town in a rush and hands over Bud in a carrier. But it isn’t until two Russians in tracksuits drag Hank over the bar at the joint where he works and beat him to a pulp that he starts to get the idea: Someone wants something from him. He just doesn’t know what it is, where it is, or how to make them understand he doesn’t have it.
Within twenty-four hours Hank is running over rooftops, swinging his old aluminum bat for the sweet spot of a guy’s head, playing hide and seek with the NYPD, riding the subway with a dead man at his side, and counting a whole lot of cash on a concrete floor.
All because of two cowboys, two Russian mafia men, and some of the weirdest goons ever assembled in one place. All because of Bud. All because once, in another life, in another world, the only thing Hank wanted was to take third base—without getting caught. Fantastic couldnt put down | Customer Rating: | | I couldnt put this book down. I read it in one weekend. I have since bought everything Charlie Huston has written. I am an animal lover and I was on the edge of my seat worried about the cat Bud the whole time. I met Charlie Huston at comic con a few years ago and he was such a nice guy. I finally have a favorite author. If you love this book buy all of his!!! | Huston is THE MAN! | Customer Rating: | | Huston has one of the best ears for dialogue I've read in a long time...comprarable to Elmore Leonard, love this book! All books in the trilogy were unbelievable...plan on reading the Joe Pitt series next... | quick, enjoyable read | Customer Rating: | Caught Stealing is a quick, easy to read, novel. The flawed main character gets tangled up with the criminal underworld and well... really just gets by on dumb luck.
The violence has been laid on a little thick. The language, well, I didn't notice.
Really, my only problem with the book was the seemingly split personality of every "bad" guy. It happened again and again that characters were portrayed as calm and/or friendly only to go off on tangents shortly afterwards. Without giving away too much, the last encounter at the bar really sticks with me - as if the author didn't know how to transition from the car to the final outcome. This chain of events just didn't make sense. I suppose you could argue that the characters weren't thinking logically, but for everyone to act this way was just unrealistic. | Will Leave The Reader Gasping For Air At Times! | Customer Rating: | Charlie Huston is the real deal! If you have not yet discovered him and are attracted to dark, urban noirish, brutally violent novels, then run, don't walk, and secure a Charlie Huston novel. I have read all the Joe Pitt vampire series and have gone back to read the Hank Thompson trilogy which begins with "Caught Stealing." As I have said in previous reviews, Huston is not the easiest author to follow as he writes in a stream of consciousness prose style that does not include who is saying what nor does he use quotation marks. But his stylings are innovative and addictive, his dialogue is highly charged and believable, and he builds characters that you can "see" on the pages. While violence surrounds his characters, it flows from the storyline and is believable and appropriate for the plot and the pacing.
In "Caught Stealing," Hank Thompson is a low profile "everyman" currently serving a stint as a bartender while fighting his own personal demons, including alcohol. He agrees to baby sit his neighbor's cat which opens the door to a series of misadventures that will boggle the reader's mind. Two groups of miscreants are seeking a huge sum of money that Hank's neighbor stole from them. They have reason to believe Hank knows where it is or has access to it. Ultimately the two groups unite, then fragment again as they collectively and individually seek the huge payroll they think Hank has hidden. Hank eventually discovers the "key" to the mess he is in but cannot seem to discover a safe way to extricate himself from the violence prone thugs, including a crooked cop, who are hot on his tail. Hank has to be the hard luck loser of the year in literature as everything that can go wrong for him, usually does. In short order, he is beaten so severely that a kidney is removed, kidnapped, beaten and threatened again, discovered his girlfriend tortured and murdered, and soon sees most of his remaining friends and acquaintances shot and killed in a killing spree in a local bar gone bad. There are times when this reader was so deeply engrossed in the pain, torment, and suffering Hank was undergoing that I had to stop and put the book down to catch my breath. Equally, the chase scenes and Hank's recurring bad luck will leave the reader gasping for some respite for the poor guy.
I have now read two of the Hank Thompson novels and all the Joe Pitt novels and I can say that Charlie Huston is an author that is now on my must read list. I unequivocally recommend his work to fans of this literary sub genre.
| Think John Cusack as Hank Thompson!!! | Customer Rating: | Bear with me on this. I'm going to write a fast review on Caught Stealing because I feel as if I owe author, Charlie Huston, a few good words about his first novel in the "Hank Thompson" trilogy. I'm in the middle of writing some other things, but I know if I don't write this review right now, it won't get done. Also, Charlie Huston isn't a famous writer as of yet, but he's definitely getting there with his "Hank Thompson" series and his "Joe Pitt" vampire novels. Give this man a few more years. He's going to soon be famous and the Hollywood movie people will be knocking on his door for the film rights to all of his books.
Caught Stealing is the first novel dealing with Hank Thompson, who is not a vampire living in New York City, but rather a bartender who once had a shot at the big leagues of baseball before injuring his leg. Now, Thompson has probably the worst luck of any fictional character I've ever read and maybe, just maybe, he reminds me a little bit of myself. Anyway, Hank Thompson is gliding along, keeping his head above water, surviving on day-to-day basis with sore feet and a steady hangover when his next-door neighbor (Russ) knocks on the door one day and gives him a large travel box for animals with Bud the cat in it, asking Hank to take care of his pet while he's out of town. No problem. If anything, Hank is a relatively nice guy and more than willing to help a friend in need. Naturally, things change for the worse a few days later when a number of unusual people start banging on Russ's door in a futile attempt to get hold of him. It isn't long, however, before they eventually start banging on Hank (and I mean this literally) in an effort to discover where Russ has taken off to. Evidently a large amount of money is missing and it looks like Russ is the one who took it. The guys looking for him (a crooked police officer, some Russian hoods, a redheaded psycho, and two very dangerous brothers who know how to hurt people) will do whatever it takes to track Russ down and Hank is all they have at the moment. Of course, Russ didn't run off with the money, and we're talking millions. He simply hid it in a storage unit somewhere in New York City and stuck the key in Bud's box. Before the story is over, however, Hank will be beaten up, his ex-girlfriend will be tortured and killed, and a number of his friends from the bar will be murdered. Still, it takes a lot more to happen before Hank finally decides to start fighting back. As he says when discovering the body of his dead girlfriend, "In a movie or a novel the guy would get mad and go on a killing rampage to get revenge, but all I wanted to do was to curl up under the table and go to sleep." When Hank does get mad enough, he quickly discovers that it's easier to kill somebody than he thought, and he's going to take out as many of the bad guys as possible before they do the tango on him.
Author, Charlie Huston, has a strange and unique style of writing (no quotation marks for the dialogue), but you get use to it rather quickly by getting caught up in the story and the somewhat unlikable character of Hank Thompson. I say unlikable because he's clearly a victim of bad luck and has to react to everything that happens to him. Most literally heroes tend to take the initiative and to act out of self-preservation by taking control of the situation that grips them like a fat lady holding a chicken wing. Hank doesn't do this till almost the end; but, boy, when he does, the bullets start flying. I think because of this his character is much more believable and that the average reader can certainly identify with him. I know that I did. Also, the author displays his extraordinary talent in character development by creating a long list of memorable figures like the two brothers, Ed & Paris, who dress up like cowboys and never hesitate when beating someone to death, or Roman the cop, who reminded me of Denzel Washington in Training Day. The characters of Caught Stealing are utterly realistic in their behavior and idiosyncrasies, the dialogue is smart and sharp and right on the mark, and the description of New York City will have you believing that you're actually there.
Charlie Huston is certainly an author to keep an eye on. I can't wait to start on the second book in the "Hank Thompson" series, Six Bad Things, so that I can find out what's happened to our reluctant hero and how he's holding up. Needless to say, this is a novel that I highly recommend! |
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