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    Riding the Rap (Raylan Givens Series #2)

    Riding the Rap (Raylan Givens Series #2)

    4.1 37

    by Elmore Leonard


    eBook

    $10.49
    $10.49

    Customer Reviews

    Elmore Leonard wrote more than forty books during his long career, including the bestsellers Raylan, Tishomingo Blues, Be Cool, Get Shorty, and Rum Punch, as well as the acclaimed collection When the Women Come Out to Dance, which was a New York Times Notable Book. Many of his books have been made into movies, including Get Shorty and Out of Sight. The short story "Fire in the Hole," and three books, including Raylan, were the basis for the FX hit show Justified. Leonard received the Lifetime Achievement Award from PEN USA and the Grand Master Award from the Mystery Writers of America. He died in 2013.

    Brief Biography

    Hometown:
    Bloomfield Village, Michigan
    Date of Birth:
    October 11, 1925
    Place of Birth:
    New Orleans, Louisiana
    Education:
    B.Ph., University of Detroit, 1950
    Website:
    http://www.elmoreleonard.com/

    Read an Excerpt

    Ocala Police picked up Dale Crowe Junior for weaving, two o'clock in the morning, crossing the the center line and having a busted taillight. Then while Dale was blowing a point-one-nine they put his name and date of birth into the national crime computer and learned he was a fugitive felon, wanted on a three-year-old charge of Unlawful Flight to Avoid Incarceration. A few days later Raylan Givens, with the Marshals Service, came up from Palm Beach County to take Dale back and the Ocala Police wondered about Raylan.

    How come if he was a federal officer and Dale Crowe Junior was wanted on a state charge...He told them he was with FAST, the Fugitive Apprehension Strike Team, assigned to the Sheriff's Office in West Palm. And that was pretty much all this marshal said. They wondered too, since he was alone, how he'd be able to drive and keep an eye on his prisoner. Dale Crowe Junior had been convicted of a third-degree five-year felony, Battery of a Police Officer, and was looking at additional time on the fugitive warrant. Dale Junior might feel he had nothing to lose on this trip south. He was a rangy kid with the build of a college athlete, bigger than this marshal in his blue suit and cowboy boots--the marshal calm though, not appearing to be the least apprehensive. He said the West Palm strike team was shorthanded at the moment, the reason he was alone, but believed he would manage.

    And when he put his hat on and drove off with Dale Junior in the confiscated two-year-old Cadillac he was using, a dark blue one, an Ocala officer said, "He believes he'll manage..."

    Another officer said, "Don't you know who that is? He's the one the Mafia guy drew on lastwinter in Miami Beach, the two of them sitting at the same table, and this marshal shot him dead. Yeah, Raylan Givens. It was in the paper."

    "That why he didn't give us the time of day? I doubt he said five words. Shows us his star..."

    The one who had read about Raylan Givens said, "I didn't get that impression. I saw him as all business, the kind goes by the book."

    He said to Dale Crowe Junior, "I know you think you can drive when you've had a few. How good are you when you're sober?"

    This marshal not sounding like the usual hard-ass lawman; Dale Junior was glad of that. He said, "I had a Caddy myself one time, till I sold it for parts and went to work at Disney's. You know what I tried out for? Play Goofy. Mickey Mouse's friend? Only you had to water-ski and I couldn't get the hang of it. Sir, I like to mention that these three years since I took off? I been clean. I never even left the state of Florida all that time, not wanting to be too far away from my folks, my old mom and dad, except I never did get to see them."

    The marshal, Raylan Givens, said, "If you're gonna talk I'll put you in the trunk and I'll drive."

    So neither of them said another word until they were south of Orlando on the Turnpike, 160 miles to West Palm, Dale Junior staring straight ahead at the highway, flat and straight through Florida scrub, boring, holding it right around sixty so as to make the trip last, give him time to think of a move he might try on the marshal. The man didn't appear to be much to handle, had a slim build and looked like a farmer--sounded like one, too--forty years old or so; he sat against his door, seat belt fastened, turned somewhat this way. He had on one of those business cowboy hats, but broken in; it looked good on him, the way he wore it cocked low on his eyes.

    Dale Junior would feel him staring, though when he glanced over the marshal was usually looking out at the road or the countryside, patient, taking the ride as it came. Dale Junior decided to start feeling him out.

    "Can I say something?"

    The marshal was looking at him now.

    "What's that?"

    "There's a service plaza coming up. I wouldn't mind stopping, get something to eat?"

    The man shook his head and Dale Junior made a face, giving the marshal an expression of pain.

    "I couldn't eat that jail food they give you. Some kind of potatoes and imitation eggs cold as ice." He waited as long as he could, almost a minute, and said, "I don't see why we can't talk some. Pass the time."

    The marshal said, "I don't care to hear any sad stories, all the bad luck and bum deals life's handed you."

    Dale Junior showed him a frown. "Don't it mean anything I got nothing on my sheet the past three years, that I've been clean all that time?"

    The marshal said, "Not to me it doesn't. Son, you're none of my business."

    Dale Junior shook his head, giving himself a beat look now, without hope. He said, "I'll tell you, I thought more'n once of giving myself up. You know why?"

    The marshal waited, not helping any.

    "So I could see my folks. So I'd know they was okay. I didn't dare write, knowing the mails would be watched." When the marshal didn't comment Dale Junior said, "They do that, don't they?"

    "What?"

    "Watch the mails?"

    Junior said, "Oh, well," paused and said, "My old Dad lost one of his legs, had it bit off by a alligator this time he's fishing the rim canal, by Lake Okeechobee? I sure wish I could see him before we get to Gun Club. That's where we're going, huh, the Gun Club jail?"

    "You're going to the County lockup," the marshal said, "to await a sentence hearing."

    "Yeah, well, that's what they call it, account of it's off Club Road. So you're not from around there, huh, West Palm?"

    The marshal didn't answer, seeming more interseted in the sky, clouds coming in from way out over the ocean.

    "Where you from anyway?"

    "I live down in Miami."

    "I been there once or twice. Man, all the spics, huh? My dad's never been to Palm Beach or seen the ocean. Never got any closer'n Twenty Mile Bend. You believe it? Spent his whole life over there around Belle Glade, Canal Point, Pahokee..." He waited, eyes on the road before saying, "You know, if we was to get off near Stuart we could take Seventy-six over to the lake, run on down to Belle Glade--it wouldn't be more'n a few miles out of the way and I'd get to see my folks. I mean just stop and say hi, kiss my old mom..." Dale Junior turned to look at the marshall. "What would you say to that?" Pie waited and said, "Not much, huh?"

    "Your old dad's never been to Palm Beach or seen the ocean," the marshal said, "but he's been up to Starke, hasn't he? He's seen the Florida state prison. You have an uncle came out of there, Elvin Crowe, and another one did his time at Lake Butler. I think we'll skip visiting any of your kin this trip."

    Dale Junior said, "My uncles're both dead."

    And the marshal said, "By gunshot, huh? You understand how I see your people?"

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    Now that his mom's gravy train has derailed, gambling, debt-ridden Palm Beach playboy Warren "Chip" Ganz has decided to take somebody rich hostage—with the help of a Bahamian ex-con, a psycho gardener/enforcer, and the beautiful, if underfed, psychic Reverend Dawn. The trouble is they choose bookmaker Harry Arno as their victim, and Harry can scam with the best. The BIG trouble is ace manhunter U.S. Marshal Raylan Givens is sleeping with Harry's ex-exotic dancer ex-girlfriend, and Joyce wants Harry found. And since nearly everyone has guns, locating and springing the captive bookie most probably can't happen without some measure of lethal difficulty.

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    Publishers Weekly - Publisher's Weekly
    Leonard's latest, about a kidnapped bookie, spent two weeks on PW's bestseller list. (June)
    Bill Ott
    Harry Arno, the bookie who loves Ezra Pound, and Raylan Givens, the Shane of South Beach, are back. When last seen, at the conclusion of Elmore Leonard's "Pronto" , 69-year-old Harry was dancing between the Feds and the Mob, both of whom had misgivings about his behavior, and the anachronistic lawman Givens was calmly shooting Tommy "The Zip" Bucks across an art deco cocktail table in the bar of the Cardozo Hotel. We pick up the action a few months later with Harry drinking too much Absolut vodka and making the mistake of hiring Puerto Rican tough guy Bobby Dio to collect 16.5K from a deadbeat who hasn't paid his sports bets. When the deadbeat and his cronie, a Bahamanian con man named Louis Lewis, join forces with Bobby Deo to abduct Harry, and when Raylan gives chase with the help of a slightly bent fortune teller, all the pieces are in place for another of Leonard's irresistible tragicomedies. If "Pronto" was the Marx Brothers with guns, this sequel is a stoned version of "Ransom of Red Chief." Anyone who thinks Quentin Tarantino invented the idea of juxtaposing bursts of graphic violence against the comic ordinariness of daily life needs to do a little homework--Leonard's lovably lethal lowlifes were mixing humanity with mayhem long before Tarantino began his career as a video-store clerk. Still, it's no surprise that the creator of "Pulp Fiction" has optioned four Leonard novels, nor for that matter, that John Travolta will star in the film version of Leonard's "Get Shorty", to open this summer. Nobody writes snappier dialogue than Leonard, and nobody understands more about the thin line separating hip bravado from wet-palmed terror.
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