Master burglar Junior Bender has a big problem, but it’s not
the kind of problem you would expect someone in Junior’s profession normally to
have. There are no cops hot on his trail
because, truth be known, the cops don’t even have Junior on their radar
screen. He is that good at what he
does. No, Junior’s problem is that he
is a burglar with a conscience who is forced to deal with a wide assortment of
people for whom conscience doesn’t even figure into the equation.
Still, it is only after a planned-to-the-split-second
burglary suddenly goes pear shaped that Junior realizes just how a serious a
chain of events he has inadvertently triggered.
King Maybe, probably the most ruthless and most powerful man in all of
Hollywood, wants Junior to do something for him – and declining the job is not
something he is going to let Junior do.
King Maybe may not be much of a physical specimen (only those who don’t
know him, though, would dare label him the shrimp he is), but his money and vicious
cruel-streak make him one very dangerous man.
King Maybe is the
fifth book in Timothy Hallinan’s Junior Bender series, and the now fortyish
Junior has been breaking into houses and businesses without ever once having
been caught since he was fourteen years old.
That’s more than two decades of unbroken success, but Junior has to
wonder if that means that he is unlikely ever to be caught, or that the odds
are increasingly more likely that his day is drawing near. Junior really has no idea, but hedges his bet
by keeping a detailed escape plan firmly in place. At a moment’s notice, Junior Bender is
prepared to disappear, assume a well-crafted new identity, and begin life anew
far from California.
Tim Hallinan |
King Maybe can
correctly be characterized as a “crime thriller,” but that would be
shortchanging both the book and its author because Tim Hallinan’s novels are as
character-driven as any literary fiction out there. Longtime fans of the series are familiar with
the Junior Bender character at this point, and they know pretty much what to
expect from him in most circumstances (although Junior does show a side of his
character at the end of this one that I didn’t suspect he had). What keeps the series so fresh is Hallinan’s
talent for creating memorable side characters for Junior to interact with, be
they Filipino houseboys, love interests, or villains like the high-heeled
cowboy boot wearing King Maybe, a little man with a big ego.
Hallinan has done it again. This one is fun.
(Review Copy provided by Publisher)
Sounds like a fun series! *adds to THE TBR LIST* Thanks for a great review.
ReplyDeleteIt's a fun series, Kristine, and I've enjoyed it. Funniest thrillers I've ever read, in fact. As good as this series is, my favorite Tim Hallinan books are the ones comprising the Poke Rafferty series...if you aren't familiar with that series, check it out, too. Different tone from the Junior Bender series, but wonderful in a completely different way.
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