Ebook370 pages
A Small Town: A Novel of Crime
By Thomas Perry
Rating: 3.5 out of 5 stars
3.5/5
()
About this ebook
A small-town cop seeks vengeance on twelve escaped inmates in this novel of “jaw-dropping twists . . . crisp in execution and thrilling until the very end” (The Wall Street Journal).
When twelve inmates pull off an audacious prison break, it liberates more than a thousand convicts into the nearby small town. The newly freed prisoners rape, murder, and destroy the quiet community—burning down homes and businesses. An immense search ensues, but the twelve who plotted it all get away.
After two years, the local and federal police agencies have yet to find them. Then, the mayor calls in Leah Hawkins, a local cop who lost a loved one that terrible night. She’s placed on sabbatical to travel across the country learning advanced police procedures. But the sabbatical is merely a ruse. Her real job is to track down the infamous twelve—and kill them.
Leah’s mission takes her from Florida to New York and from the beaches of California to an anti-government settlement deep in the Ozarks. But when the surviving fugitives realize what she’s up to, a race to kill or be killed ensues in this nonstop tale of vengeance from the Edgar Award–winning author of The Butcher’s Boy.
“Leah proves to be both a brilliant detective and a cunning predator.” —Associated Press
“Perry is an expert storyteller . . . A Small Town unfolds like a 1950s film noir.” —Wall Street Journal
When twelve inmates pull off an audacious prison break, it liberates more than a thousand convicts into the nearby small town. The newly freed prisoners rape, murder, and destroy the quiet community—burning down homes and businesses. An immense search ensues, but the twelve who plotted it all get away.
After two years, the local and federal police agencies have yet to find them. Then, the mayor calls in Leah Hawkins, a local cop who lost a loved one that terrible night. She’s placed on sabbatical to travel across the country learning advanced police procedures. But the sabbatical is merely a ruse. Her real job is to track down the infamous twelve—and kill them.
Leah’s mission takes her from Florida to New York and from the beaches of California to an anti-government settlement deep in the Ozarks. But when the surviving fugitives realize what she’s up to, a race to kill or be killed ensues in this nonstop tale of vengeance from the Edgar Award–winning author of The Butcher’s Boy.
“Leah proves to be both a brilliant detective and a cunning predator.” —Associated Press
“Perry is an expert storyteller . . . A Small Town unfolds like a 1950s film noir.” —Wall Street Journal
Author
Thomas Perry
Thomas Perry is the New York Times bestselling author of nearly thirty novels, including the critically acclaimed Jane Whitefield series, The Old Man, and The Butcher's Boy, which won the Edgar Award. He lives in Southern California. Follow Thomas on Facebook at @ThomasPerryAuthor.
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Reviews for A Small Town
Rating: 3.3297872340425534 out of 5 stars
3.5/5
47 ratings6 reviews
- Rating: 3 out of 5 stars3/5July 19 in Weldonville, Colorado, all hell breaks loose! A prison break!And it happens in the first 30 pages! Bam!12 men plan it, about 1,200 escape, and the town, and people, of Weldonville pay for it.Two years later, Leah Hawkins goes after the 12... with the full backing of Weldonville!The story of the prison break, and the flashbacks to it are the best parts of this book. The hunt, though I loved the reason behind it, not so much. Too heavy on backstories that didn’t matter much to the plot.
- Rating: 3 out of 5 stars3/5I have always been a fan of Thomas Perry so I was pleased when Net Galley offered an advance copy of Perry's most recent book. I didn't think it measured up to the previous titles of his I enjoyed. There's no mystery. We know the why, how, what and where of the bad guys and the same for the heroine who would appear to have almost superwoman capabilities. Leah, the police lieutenant, "hired" (it's all supposed to be off the books) is given virtually unlimited funds (which she spends wisely, mind you) to murder (there is no other word for it) a bunch of convicts who had engineered a vast prison break and then had savaged the local community. Her motives appear to be focused on revenge for the killing of her married lover (the adultery was OK because his wife was in a wheelchair) during a shootout with the bad guys following the breakout.That she's more than competent at tracking down the scoundrels is never at issue, and her techniques flawless and filled with mounds of luck. It goes without saying she is athletic, tall, blonde and beautiful and probably eats right most of the time.It's a perfect book for a plane ride: distracting enough but not so much that drifting off once in a while would be bothersome to its rather wrinkled flow.My thanks to Net Galley.
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5A well-planned prison break costs guards and prison personnel their lives as it frees hundreds of violent prisoners. The twelve masterminds of the break-out head into Weldonville, Colorado where they set about destroying the town as they steal, murder, and rape with unconcerned abandon.Two years later, the twelve have vanished, swallowed up by the places they’ve taken refuge, eluding the police and the FBI, living free.Police Detective Lieutenant Leah Hawkins has promised herself that, if the twelve evaded apprehension for two years, she would take on the task of hunting them down and killing them. Can she find the twelve fugitives by herself and avenge the horror they brought to the unsuspecting town she calls home? Or is revenge destined to claim even more Weldonville lives?While the narrative opens with a detailed account of the prison break, the story itself is not overly graphic or grisly. The constantly-building tension keeps the reader on the edge of the seat as unexpected reveals bring surprises to the telling of the tale. The unfolding story is one filled with horror, heartbreak, violence, and resonance. Is the premise a bit far-fetched? Perhaps, but this is where a reader’s willing suspension of disbelief allows for enjoying the cat-and-mouse thriller as the story plays out over the pages of this novel. Well-told, with a sense of attempting to right a horrific wrong, readers will find themselves cheering Leah on as she seeks a sense of justice for the people of the damaged little town.Recommended.
- Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5I love a good Thomas Perry. This one was good. Not his very best but very good. Interesting plot about a team of prisoners who break out of a private prison located in a small town... and the aftermath.
- Rating: 3 out of 5 stars3/5I enjoyed this book, but it was hard to see Leah as a real person. She seemed like Rambo. Rambo as a small town cop seems a little far-fetched. Everything seemed to fall in place to easily for her. It needed a more realistic plot
- Rating: 2 out of 5 stars2/5This was the first of the author's books that I have read. I found the book to be easily readable, however highly unrealistic. The premise of the book is that twelve inmates take over a federal prison, release the entire inmate population, rape and pillage their way through a local town, and then disappear into the night. The main character, a former police officer, is hired by the city council to go rogue and track down, and eliminate, the twelve main escapees. First. I am a retired Federal Bureau of Prisons employee. The premise and scenes described are completely unrealistic. The overpowering of the "control center" of the prison is impossible. Inmates do not have access to the entrance. Same with the prison armory, they are not located inside the prison where inmates have access. Same with the armed guards patrolling inside the prison. Doesn't happen. Along with many, many other details in the book, it makes me wonder if the author ever actually researched Federal prisons? Second. The idea that a city council would hire a vigilante police officer to hunt down and kill people. Does the author really want the reader to believe the idea of that many people being able to keep a secret? Not today!Third. The vigilante. How is the reader to believe that a single police officer is able to independently track down, across the entire country, people that the FBI/State Police agencies/etc, could not? And a couple of years after the initial escape? The FBI/BOP/etc would NEVER, EVER give up the search where so many of their own brothers-in-arms had been murdered! And the thought that these simple criminals could evade the best minds in law enforcement is laughable. Fourth. The idea that this vigilante could just walk into a place and murder people, with no repercussions or investigation by the affected jurisdiction is crazy. No, while the story would make a semi-successful B movie plot, it is totally unrealistic. I have to pass on recommending this one!
Book preview
A Small Town - Thomas Perry
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