Reviews for Kings of midnight

Kirkus
Copyright © Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Chasing her retirement number, superthief Crissa Stone (Cold Shot to the Heart, 2011, etc.) fills bunches of money bags. And body bags. Crissa Stone is a one-woman larceny machine--smart, resourceful and, above all, careful, which explains an enviable success rate. But she's reached the point where it makes sense for her to leave the life behind. Her exit will require a really big final score. Fortunately, opportunity knocks in the guise of ex-mobster Benny Roth. Hidden deep in a witness protection program for longer than anyone can remember, Benny's been doing an exemplary job of going straight. He has a job he likes, he has friends and he has Marta. Benny's 62, she's in her 20s, yet the feeling between them is clearly genuine. Love and tranquility, however, come to an abrupt end with the intrusion of three wise guys from the East. Not only do they remember Benny, but they recall his connection to a certain vanished haul pegged at $8 to $10 million. They want Benny to help recover what's been lost. Marta in tow, he wriggles free of them and, through a mutual friend, makes his way to Crissa. The aging racketeer and the slick young highway person form an unlikely partnership. Will it be strong enough to withstand their predators while they hunt for lost treasure? Or will thieves fall out? Once again Stroby demonstrates how adept he is at making readers empathize with the essentially unworthy.]] Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.


Publishers Weekly
(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved

The real-life Lufthansa heist from Kennedy Airport in 1978 provides the backdrop for Stroby's suspenseful second novel featuring driven but ethical thief Crissa Stone (after 2011's Cold Shot to the Heart). A scheme targeting ATMs ends with Crissa's partners gunning each other down, and her finding a new outlet for her criminal energies with retired gangster Benny Roth. One of the few people involved in the famous robbery still alive, Benny has been roused from a quiet existence in Indiana by an old Mafia crony, Danny Taliferro, who believes Benny knows where recently deceased mob boss Joey Dio stashed more than $2 million from the heist. On the run from Danny and his crew, Benny recruits Crissa to help him retrieve the hidden loot. As coolly efficient and professional as its heroine, this thriller evokes Donald Westlake's Parker novels with lean storytelling that pauses only for meticulously detailed descriptions of criminals at work or in conflict. Agent: Robin Rue, Writers House. (Apr.) (c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.


Book list
From Booklist, Copyright © American Library Association. Used with permission.

*Starred Review* Crissa Stone, the main character in Stroby's excellent Cold Shot to the Heart (2010), is back. She's in New York, after stealing more than $300,000 from South Carolina ATM machines, and she's trying to bribe a Texas parole board to free her lover. But a very crooked lawyer steals her money, and she must team with a sixtysomething, former New York wise guy who thinks he knows the whereabouts of millions in cash stolen and stashed away in the 1970s. The problem is that other aging wise guys are also after the money, and however long in the tooth they are, they're also still greedy and casually murderous. Stroby seems to get better book by book. This one offers plenty of excitement and plot twists, a solid body count, and vividly drawn characters. Crissa is crime fiction's best career criminal since Richard Stark's Parker. She's smart, professional, dangerous, and, in her way, principled. Benny Roth, her aging, wise-guy partner, serves as a window into a past when New York mobsters had more to fear from each other than from law enforcement. Kings of Midnight puts Stroby in the same league as Stark (a pseudonym for Donald E. Westlake) and other exemplars of hard-edged crime.--Gaughan, Thomas Copyright 2010 Booklist

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