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Formats
Ebook Details
  • 11/2023
  • 9781960378095 B0C6WGDG7F
  • 328 pages
  • $9.49
Paperback Details
  • 11/2023
  • 9781960378088
  • 328 pages
  • $15.99
Hardcover Details
  • 11/2023
  • 9781960378071
  • 328 pages
  • $25.99
Aaron Palmer
Author
Money for Nothing
Aaron Palmer, author

Adult; Mystery/Thriller; (Market)

Chicago. Taylor Street. 1986. Accomplished burglar Ralph "Beans" Trombino surrounds himself with the fringe elements that frequent the neighborhood social clubs. Outfit guys ,dirty cops, thieves, bookies, and gamblers. With his photographic memory and almost supernatural instincts, Beans has developed a reputation among his kind as an exceptional planner of heists. He and his life long friends, Cosh and Izzy, consider themselves honorable thieves. No stickups. No killing for money. No stealing from people who don't have it coming. But when they take on the score of a lifetime-a plane carrying freshly minted cash to the Chicago Federal Reserve-the lines begin to blur. Their man on the inside turns out to be much less than honorable. In fact, he's a sadistic serial killer terrorizing the city. When he pulls a double-cross and tries to kill Beans's sister Debbie, the plan becomes something more than just a daring fifteen-million-dollar heist.
Reviews
Palmer’s debut, the first volume of his Tales from Taylor Street, centers on the capers of three friends, self-styled “‘honorable’ thieves,” in 1980s Chicago. Best pals Ralph “Beans” Trombino, Cosh Geraldi, and Richard “Izzy” Tonsi reside in Chicago’s Taylor Street neighborhood, running small-time robberies and holding court at their old Italian-restaurant-turned-club in between jobs. The trio, strict adherents to a code of honor that dictates they only engage in “victimless crimes, or at least [crimes where] the victim had it coming,” take teenager Jimmy Pope under their wing as they seek out new jobs, but when they agree to an epic score with the notorious “Step” Virrina, their lives are forever altered.

Taylor Street is a worthy setting, equal to the book’s thrilling plot line, where the gritty neighborhood comes alive with colorful characters, whether it’s Beans’s Uncle Skinny, neighborhood bookie Willy the Wiz (replete with black Stacy Adams wingtips), or Pete the Bum, a “bona fide hobo” with serious street cred. Palmer paints the labyrinthine ecosystem of cops, thieves, their all-too-human aspirations and dreams, and their collaborations—said and unsaid, overt and covert—in a realistic manner, and he smartly avoids styling the protagonists as idealistic heroes. Each is a thorough professional, as proud of their skills and exploits as any other on the “right” side of the law.

The brisk pace and mounting tension towards the end will keep readers on the edge of their seats, and once Step’s true intentions are exposed, the stakes grow exponentially higher—with actual lives hanging in the balance. The final resolution adds depth and nuance to the thriller, setting the stage for the next in the series, as Beans and his crew are tasked with avenging a childhood friend’s abuse at the hands of his physical therapist. This is a gripping read with unforgettable characters.

Takeaway: A gang of good-hearted thieves takes on 1980s Chicago.

Comparable Titles: S. A. Cosby’s Blacktop Wasteland, Grace D. Li’s Portrait of a Thief.

Production grades
Cover: A
Design and typography: A
Illustrations: N/A
Editing: A
Marketing copy: A

Len Joy, author of Dry Heat and Freedom’s Just Another Word

"Action-packed ... a masterful job of capturing the neighborhood and the ear ... reminiscent of Elmore Leonard or Richard Price, this is an engrossing, compassionate, and sometimes humorous tale. ... Highly recommended."

Formats
Ebook Details
  • 11/2023
  • 9781960378095 B0C6WGDG7F
  • 328 pages
  • $9.49
Paperback Details
  • 11/2023
  • 9781960378088
  • 328 pages
  • $15.99
Hardcover Details
  • 11/2023
  • 9781960378071
  • 328 pages
  • $25.99
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