Synopses & Reviews
Praise for
The Betrayers“Compares favorably to Elmore Leonard’s early urban crime novels. His protagonists are intelligent, self-aware, and capable of swift, harsh action. And no one is better at capturing the flirty-but-keep-your-distance banter between the sexes. Tracy and Hepburn got nothin’ on this guy. Plan ahead and clear a shelf for James Patrick Hunt. He’s the real deal.”
—Booklist (starred review)
“Hunt, a relative newcomer, gives [the story] a distinctive edge by keeping the action white hot, the participants ice cold, the pace headlong and the dialogue as curt as a draft notice.”
—Kirkus Reviews
“Intriguing… His landscape abounds with quirky characters of all stripes; some are great company and others can crack wise and kill at the same time.”
—Publishers Weekly
“Fast, gritty, and convincing. Crime fiction at its best.”
—Lee Child, author of Bad Luck and Trouble
“Intricate, completely convincing, and scorching hot, The Betrayers is reminiscent of the best of Elmore Leonard.… Yes, it’s that good.”
—George Pelecanos, author of The Night Gardener
“A classic big-city police procedural that flickers like a black-and-white movie across the imagination.”
—Denise Hamilton, author of Prisoner of Memory
Review
Praise for Goodbye Sister Disco
“The superbly drawn characters in this mix of thriller and police procedural would do Joseph Wambaugh or Michael Connelly proud… This is still another fine piece of work from the author of the Maitland series and two other top-notch stand-alones.”
--Booklist (starred review)
“Hunts roller coaster of a crime thriller has it all—great characters, plenty of action, and a nail-biting ending. For fans of police procedurals.”
--Library Journal (starred review)
“Hunt sets his plot in motion with such quick, sure strokes and sketches even minor characters with such authority… Pure pleasure.”
--Kirkus Reviews
Praise for The Betrayers
“Compares favorably to Elmore Leonards early urban crime novels. His protagonists are intelligent, self-aware, and capable of swift, harsh action. And no one is better at capturing the flirty-but-keep-your-distance banter between the sexes. Tracy and Hepburn got nothin on this guy. Plan ahead and clear a shelf for James Patrick Hunt. Hes the real deal.”
—Booklist (starred review)
“Densely woven, economical and utterly assured. Relative newcomer Hunt plots like a veteran of urban warfare.”
--Kirkus Reviews
“Intriguing… His landscape abounds with quirky characters of all stripes; some are great company and others can crack wise and kill at the same time.”
—Publishers Weekly
“Fast, gritty, and convincing. Crime fiction at its best.”
—Lee Child, author of Bad Luck and Trouble
“Intricate, completely convincing, and scorching hot, The Betrayers is reminiscent of the best of Elmore Leonard.… Yes, its that good.”
—George Pelecanos, author of The Night Gardener
“A classic big-city police procedural that flickers like a black-and-white movie across the imagination.”
—Denise Hamilton, author of Prisoner of Memory
Synopsis
Lieutenant George Hastings, a cool-headed, quick-thinking police detective, leapt to the forefront of the St. Louis Police Department when two beat cops were gunned down, and he led the joint FBI/police taskforce that caught the killer.
Now he is back at work with the FBI on a new case: Cordelia Penmark, the daughter of a wealthy businessman, has been kidnapped and her boyfriend callously executed outside of a posh holiday party for his law firm.
The murder was clearly a message—the kidnappers are willing to take this as far as they have to—and the target and the ransom demand indicate that the crime is politically motivated. But the investigators are stumped. Wary because of bruised egos on his team and bad blood among members of the young womans family, and suspicious of the kidnappers intentions, Hastings knows that theres more than simple politics in play as the kidnappers pull him and the girls father into a deadly game of cat and mouse.
Slick, sharp, and authentic, Goodbye Sister Disco, the sequel to the acclaimed novel The Betrayers, establishes James Patrick Hunt as one of crime fictions rising stars.
Synopsis
In "The Betrayers," Hunt introduced George Hastings, an even-handed St. Louis police detective who caught a dirty FBI agent. Now Hastings is back on the case when the daughter of a wealthy businessman is kidnapped and her boyfriend killed.
About the Author
JAMES PATRICK HUNT, a lawyer, was born in Surrey, England. A graduate of St. Louis University and Marquette University Law School, he is the author of three previous novels and now lives in Tulsa, Oklahoma.