Jump to ratings and reviews
Rate this book

Terrier Rand #1

The Last Kind Words

Rate this book
From award-winning author Tom Piccirilli comes a wholly original crime novel introducing the Rands, a vipers’ nest of crooks and cons, one generation stealing from the next. Upon the razor-thin edge between love and violence lives a pair of brothers, their bonds frayed by betrayals and guilt, their loyalty to each other their last salvation.

Raised to pick a pocket before he could walk, Terry Rand cut free from his family after his older brother, Collie, went on a senseless killing spree that left eight dead. Five years later, only days before his scheduled execution, Collie contacts Terry and asks him to return home. Collie claims he wasn’t responsible for one of the murders—and insists that the real killer is still on the loose.

Dogged by his own demons, Terry is swept back into the schemes and scams of his family: His father, Pinsch, a retired cat burglar, brokenhearted because of his two sons. His card-sharp uncles, Mal and Grey, who’ve incurred the anger of the local mob. His grandfather, Shep, whose mind is failing but whose fingers can still slip out a wallet  from across the room. His teenage sister, Dale, who’s flirting dangerously with the lure of the family business. And Kimmie, the woman Terry abandoned, who’s now raising a child with Terry’s former best friend.  

Terry pieces together the day his brother turned rabid, delving into a blood history that reveals the Rand family tree is rotten to the roots, and the secrets his ancestors buried are now coming furious and vengeful to the surface.

A meditation on how love can confine a person just as easily as it can free him, juxtaposing shocking violence and sly humor, The Last Kind Words is the brilliantly inventive family saga that only a singular talent like Tom Piccirilli could conjure.

Unknown Binding

First published January 1, 2012

108 people are currently reading
6516 people want to read

About the author

Tom Piccirilli

186 books386 followers
Thomas Piccirilli (May 27, 1965 – July 11, 2015) was an American novelist and short story writer.

Piccirilli sold over 150 stories in the mystery, thriller, horror, erotica, and science fiction fields. He was a two-time winner of the International Thriller Writers Award for "Best Paperback Original" (2008, 2010). He was a four-time winner of the Bram Stoker Award. He was also a finalist for the 2009 Edgar Allan Poe Award given by the Mystery Writers of America, a final nominee for the Fantasy Award, and the winner of the first Bram Stoker Award given in the category of "Best Poetry Collection".

Ratings & Reviews

What do you think?
Rate this book

Friends & Following

Create a free account to discover what your friends think of this book!

Community Reviews

5 stars
600 (21%)
4 stars
1,067 (38%)
3 stars
747 (27%)
2 stars
247 (8%)
1 star
87 (3%)
Displaying 1 - 30 of 335 reviews
Profile Image for karen.
4,012 reviews172k followers
September 8, 2018
goodbye, tom piccirilli. i have loved your books so much.




mmmm... love this book.

a family of thieves, in various states of leaving the lifestyle behind them, living in a custom-made house where generations-worth of ill-gotten loot is squirreled away behind the walls, growing old and soft together; the older generation succumbing to alzheimers, and the younger ones either trying to go straight, or to make the decision to follow the family trade.

one of their own is behind bars after a spree killing, which is completely against the family code: the rands do not use weapons of any kind.they are thieves with honor, you dig? so he is more or less shunned from the family, and no one visits, until the one son who got away and tried to make a "straight" life for himself is called back, visits his brother in prison, and reluctantly agrees to do him one last favor before his brother's execution.

oh, and they are all named after breeds of dogs. which for some reason does not come across as silly, probably because the contrast of smart and skillful criminals and doggies works well, and it is no different from the nicknames you would find in a novel about the mob, for example, and they are frequently shortened so it doesn't read like an aesop's fable. but here you have collie, grey(hound), mal(amute), (aire)dale, pinscher, and terry (terrier).

here are some pictures of dogs:













and it's just great. a literary crime thriller that has character development, a central mystery, and more heart than you would expect. i loved every one of these characters. i would have liked to have seen more of kimmy, but then, so would terry, so i suppose it is okay that we are both on the same page there.

the climax of this story is pure deliciousness, and i am not even going to come close to ruining it by speaking of it. zipped lips. but - unzip - it was perfect and tragic and surprising and dare i say it?? filmic. -zip.

this one i can strongly recommend to anyone looking for a smart thriller. doooooo it.

twis.

come to my blog!
Profile Image for Dan Schwent.
3,200 reviews10.8k followers
January 5, 2018
Terrier Rand returns home, summoned by a phone call telling him of his brother Collie's impending execution. While Collie admits to the murders he committed, he knows one of the killings he's been charged with isn't his doing and wants Terrier to find out who was behind the murder of Rebecca Clarke. Will his investigation tear his family, a multi-generational gang of thieves, apart?

While I enjoyed A Choir of Ill Children, I wasn't super motivated to read another Tom Piccirilli book. I snapped this up for $1.99 and soon found I'd been quite a fool.

The Last Kind Words looks like a crime book on the surface. Terrier Rand has been on the run from his past for five years, a past full of burglaries and such, when he gets the fateful call. Terry slips back into his old life like a pair of shoes that don't fit right anymore, all the while trying to make sense of why his brother would murder eight people and wondering if he didn't have the same potential in himself.

While the mystery element is there, it's more about what binds a family together and what can tear it apart. Terrier didn't leave town under the best of circumstances and now he's reaping the rewards. His family mostly communicates through silence and minding their own business. A lot of things aren't the way he remembered them. His little sister is a teenager. His grandfather has Altzheimers and his uncles seem to be heading in that direction. Reports swarm the Rand house daily and Detective Gillmore is around all too often.

The mystery in and of itself was pretty engaging. It was just over the halfway mark that I had an inkling of who the killer was and I turned out to be right. I knew the big confrontation was going to be bad and I was not disappointed. The final ending was pretty sad.

Terrier Rand is one of the more interesting protagonists I've come across in recent years, a man from a family of thieves who finally has to take a long hard look at himself. While he's not a killer, he's definitely a thief through and through.

The Last Kind Words is a dark, funny, sad, thought-provoking book, so much more than what I thought I was getting. Time to buy more Tom Piccirilli. Five out of five stars.
Profile Image for Kemper.
1,389 reviews7,611 followers
April 4, 2018
It’s hard to be a black sheep in a family of thieves and swindlers, but Collie Rand managed to pull it off by going on a murder spree during which he killed several innocent people including a child.

Terrier Rand couldn’t cope with what his brother did and took off for five years, but with the execution date approaching he reluctantly comes home when Collie asks to see him. Collie tells Terry that while he’s guilty of most of crimes that he didn’t kill one young woman that was pinned on him, and that he fears that a serial killer may be out there commiting more murders.

Collie has a long history of play mind games as well as being a homicidal jerkface so Terry doubts his brother, and his homecoming isn’t a pleasant trip down memory lane. He finds his family still reeling with the shock and shame of Collie’s crimes as well as other issues, and he’s still in love with the woman he skipped out on even though she married one of his best friends. As he tries to help his family pull the pieces back together and come to terms with his past Terry begins looking into the possibility that Collie is telling the truth about another killer.

I’ve heard a lot of good things about the late Tom Piccirilli, but while there was a lot I liked in this it also had a lot of elements that didn’t work for me. The idea of a guy raised by a family of criminals coming home and investigating a murder is a nice hook, and the writing is very solid overall. However, I had a lot of problems with the tone of the book.

As our first person narrator we spend the entire book with Terry’s angst, and that’s understandable to some extent. If this was straight-up character based crime fiction, like from a Richard Price type of ultra realistic story, then it’d be fine and Piccirilli kinda gets there. Yet it’s also got this kind of gimmicky criminal underworld thing that seems more like something that belong in a Richard Stark novel or a John Wick movie. There’s so much stuff like that from the way the whole Rand family is named after types of dogs to the descriptions of their house being stuffed with hidden spaces filled with loot from heists over the years. (You’d think a family of known thieves wouldn’t want a house filled with evidence of their crimes.) Again, if that’s what you’re going for and you put a criminal playing detective in that world then that’s a solid idea.

But trying to mix serious character drama with a guy brooding about his family and his regrets doesn’t sync up with a story about thieves who seem to have been imported from a pulp novel. Then you add in the serial killer story which gets pretty stupid and melodramatic in the end, and it just feels like a lot of scattered elements that don’t work well together.

It’s also possible that I’m still so creeped out from reading I'll Be Gone in the Dark a few weeks ago that I refuse to sympathize with a guy who breaks into people’s houses when they’re sleeping. Whatever the reason, this one didn’t live up to a strong start for me.
Profile Image for Barbara.
1,762 reviews5,278 followers
November 1, 2021


Terrier Rand's family are "gentleman" thieves - no violence.



So when Terry's brother Collie goes on a murder spree resulting in the death of eight people, Terry leaves town, abandoning his girlfriend Kimmy.



Five years later, shortly before his execution, Collie asks to see Terry. Collie tells Terry that he's guilty of all but one of the murders, that of a pretty teenage girl. Collie wants Terry to find the real murderer.

Terry reluctantly looks into the claim while navigating the competing interests of various cops and crooks in his home town. Rather than being a straight murder mystery, however, the book is more an exploration of how a devastating act affects the other people in your life.



The characters - including Terry's card-shark uncles, Alzheimer afflicted grandpa, rebellious teenage sister, loving mom, and distracted dad - are well-drawn and interesting; one of my favorite characters was JFK - the family dog. The ending is a little too drawn out but this is a minor quibble. I enjoyed the book.



You can follow my reviews at http://reviewsbybarbsaffer.blogspot.com/
Profile Image for Richard.
1,062 reviews469 followers
August 2, 2017
Tom Piccirilli is already one of my favorite authors even though this is actually the first novel I've read by him. I've read and loved a handful of his great novellas in the past year and have been infatuated with his sensitive but uncompromising writing. Tommy Pic doesn't disappoint in the full-length novel form either! Here, we follow the Rands, a family of Long Island thieves and burglars that go back generations who's strong bond has fallen apart after Collie, the oldest son, goes on an inexplicable killing spree that lands him on death row, and after the youngest son, Terrier, decides to abandon the family and go off on his own. But now after five years, Terry has returned and must confront this broken family that he deserted years before.

The characters pulled me in almost immediately, each one clearly drawn and familiar; each one deserving enough of their own novel. But the focus here is on Terry, a man haunted by the the potential legacy of the Rand name. Will he fall victim to severe Alzheimer's like his grandfather Shepherd, fall into the underneath and go mad-dog like his brother Collie, or will he simply just live the rest of his days in a house full of stolen junk; a faded, washed-up and lonely thief, breaking in to and creeping around in other homes at night, witnessing the lives of people happier than he is, and pining for his lost love? These questions haunt Terry throughout the novel as he knows that these are real possibilities. The themes Piccirilli tackles here are very similar to the one he explored in the last novella I read by him, All You Despise , the theme that the pull of family bond and obligation is almost impossible to explain, but can affect someone for the rest of their life. Both this novel and All You Despise can be seen as companion pieces, where Piccirilli tries to investigate why the power of family can be so strong and crippling. The novel is about family: longing for it, hating it, or simply just being stuck with it whether you want to be or not.
Profile Image for Sandra.
213 reviews104 followers
May 23, 2016
“The last kind words ever spoken to Jesus were spoken by a thief.”
“Excuse me?”
He tried to pull away but I held on.
“You’re—you’re—”
“We were the first let into heaven. Thieves are pardoned.”

The motto of the Rand's family of honorary thieves.
Thou shall not kill, nor use weapons...
But Collie broke that code and is now on death row for killing eight people. Now that the time has come of his final hour, he denies having to anything with the last murder. Now Terry, his brother, needs to find out who the real killer is.

Only my first book by Tom Piccirilli and I already know he needs to be on my favorite list. He has an extensive oeuvre, so there are quite a few books I have my eye on. Sadly enough, he passed away last year. I think it is a huge loss for the crime/mystery/thriller genre. Moodiness, crime, tension, thrills, grittiness, suspense; he knows how to pack a punch. He makes you care for his characters and you only want the best for them. What stood out among them, was the loyalty they show towards one another. And the secrets they kept from each other.
"We were a family of thieves who knew one another very well and respected one another’s secrets. It was dysfunction at its worst."

An extraordinary book by a gifted writer!

His Facebook page is still kept up-to-date by his wife. There she shares some of his essays, his musings and some other related news to his work.
Profile Image for James Thane.
Author 10 books7,066 followers
October 2, 2012
This book is less a crime novel and more a meditation on the family ties that both bind us together and drive us totally nuts. After suffering a personal crisis, Terrier Rand left his close-knit family of thieves and grifters and ran away to become a ranch hand. Five years later, he is called home to visit his elder brother, Collie. (It's a family tradition that all of the Rands are named after dog breeds.)

Collie is days away from being executed for multiple murders. Murder is a crime totally foreign to the Rands, and Terry and Collie never got along very well. But Terry answers the call nonetheless and is immediately sucked back into the web of his extended family, which includes a grandfather with Alzheimer's, a long suffering mother, a father who has allegedly retired from crime, a couple of uncles who are card sharps who have managed to antagonize a local mob boss, and a fifteen-year-old sister who's dating a thug-gangster-wannabe.

Collie now insists that he was innocent of one of the murders for which he was convicted. He also tells Terry that a number of other women who resembled the victim have been killed in a similar fashion. Collie wants his brother to somehow find and stop the serial killer.

Terry has no idea whether to believe his brother or not, but he begins an investigation in which his skills as a burglar are at least as useful as the more traditional skills of a detective. In the meantime, he tries to make peace with the rest of the family that he abandoned and to earn his way back into the fold.

This is a very good book with a cast of memorable characters. At one level, they are all--deservedly--social outcasts, but you can't help but be drawn into their lives because Piccirilli has drawn them so brilliantly. I'm looking forward to the promised sequel.
Profile Image for Melki.
7,253 reviews2,606 followers
September 13, 2014
I glanced at the register. I could have it cleaned out in under ten seconds. I could wait for the bartender to go get another case of beer from the storeroom. Or I could sucker-punch him and nab the cash. No one would try to stop me. That kind of draw was always there for me. Knowing I could reach out and grab what I wanted at any time. Of course it was. I was a thief.

You really don't expect a family of thieves to have high moral standards, but while Collie Rand sits on death row for the murder of eight people, his parents want NOTHING to do with him. Only his brother, Terry, will see him. On that fateful visit to prison, Terry is skeptical when his older sibling tells him that he only murdered seven people; he suspects the eighth was the victim of a serial killer. And he wants Terry to find the murderer

Terry leaves feeling shaken by the encounter. Of course his brother killed the last victim. Once you've killed a nine-year-old girl and her family, what difference does one more woman make? Then there is that fear, deep inside, that it would be easy, oh, so easy, to slip over the edge himself...

My Christ, I thought, I have the same blood running through my veins.

It is the Family (yes, capital F) that keeps this from becoming a run-of-the-mill whodunit. A family with ties and history and secrets. As Terry searches for a killer, his family is never far from his mind. Then there's that whole blood-is-thicker-than-water thing...

Maybe it was in the blood, this thing that made us so bent, so wrong. The veins in my wrist ticked away, black and twisted.

This is a well-written and involving mystery. Piccirilli just gets better and better.
Profile Image for Greg.
1,128 reviews2,142 followers
April 11, 2013
Tales from Long Island

(this isn't so much a review as a rambling of some not quite right in the head people I've known in my college days.)

This book is excellent. Not perfect, but very very good. You might want to consider reading it. It might be the sleeper hit of this year's reading for you (sorry, I couldn't figure out what to call that, this season's reading? What season?)

Karen wrote a good review of this book and it gives the major plot stuff you might want to know about. So you should read her review.

This book has the Southern / Appalachia fucked up feeling to it, but it's not from that neck of the woods, it's from the Eastern part of the island I'm currently living on, although you need to get another ten miles or so from where I am right now before people start calling it by the proper name, Long Island.

Long Island is sort of a fucked up place. I sort of think of it like Southern New Jersey (Jersey Shore land) with emotional problems. I'm basing this on my experience going to a college where the majority of the students came from this island. Most because at one point both High Times and Playboy magazines called it the best party school of the Northeast. Others, because dark forces confused a handful of people who really didn't belong at the school, or have any reason to have chosen that school over many other mediocre public colleges in the State University system of New York to attend it. I personally chose it because of some walkways that I thought were nice. Because that is how I make important life choices, and that is how I wound up at the heights that I'm at today. (So kids, remember find the most superficial reason to choose your path and you too can be working in retail at almost forty years old).
I think so many kids from Long Island attended the school because it was the furthest they could get away from home, without having to go to the very weather wonky colleges in Western New York (and because High Times said it was a good party school with good weed).

Freshman year I lived in a suite. A suite was three double rooms that shared a bathroom and a little living room. Fifty percent of the occupants in this suite were from Long Island (the other fifty percent? One from the capital region (that would be me!), one local, and one a morbidly obese kid from Connecticut (which is fucking baffling, why would you go to a mediocre SUNY from out of state to study computer science, something that the school wasn't known for at all?), the fat kid smelled terrible and we were pretty mean to him, but he seemed to like me and thought I was nice to him, so I'd let him sit in my room, on my roommate's bed, on his pillow and stink it up with his distinctive odor, "Was Fat-Fuck sitting on my bed again?", "Yep.").

My actual roommate was from Long Island. He had been a second or third string high school football player. He would spend hours watching video's from games his team had played in, relishing his glory days, and calling everyone over if he happened to have been caught on camera standing on the sidelines or running some kind of interference in some inconsequential manner somewhere in the background. Those were the days!

Another Long Island person I knew was kicked out of college about two weeks into the semester when he was held up at gun point in his dorm room by some redneck with a shotgun and had the weed he was dealing stolen from him. He went to the cops and reported that someone stole his weed from him. And the school kicked him out. This almost sounds like something from this book, actually.

Another beat the shit out of a woman who honked at him once at a stop light. This guy had many other 'problems' but this was probably the major one. He also threatened to kill me once because I was a vegetarian and I told him that I could see myself one day maybe listening to jazz or classical music instead of punk. And I don't mean, like jokingly said he would kill me, he was like red in the face screaming at me. He also spent about an hour each day laying on the ground holding his head and moaning. Good thing we were roommates, right?

Another, was a sophomore year girlfriend who went nuts and started to wear a plastic fireman helmet around school, waving a branch that was supposed to represent her womanhood and got up in front of a group of feminists at a talk and started screaming chopping broccoli. Her best friend from home was a virgin who hooked up with lots of guys and wouldn't have 'sex' with them but let them fuck her ass.

Or the best friend of my temper prone roommate who would reportedly (I missed knowing him due to my spotty college career) insert all kinds of things in his ass while hanging out with people. He'd just do it, not needing to be prompted, or asked, just people would be talking and he'd take off his pants and put a GI Joe figure up there.

I'm sure I'm missing a few highlights of my college era 'friends' and 'friends of friends' from the Island, but I do believe that the place that spawned all these people could also be the home to a lovable but dysfunctional family of professional thieves all named after dog breeds and the variety of 'colorful' characters that populate this novel.

As I said above, it's very good. I'd recommend it, especially if you like crime fiction and/or that Daniel Woodrell, Tom Franklin, Ron Rash type of book.
Profile Image for Steve Lowe.
Author 12 books198 followers
July 6, 2012
You there, with that book in your hand. Put that down. Now, pick up this one and resume. No, seriously. You don't want to be reading that, you need to be reading this.

Sometimes you read a book and can just tell the author is trying too hard to make it something more than it is. That is not this kind of book. The Last Kind Words is literary crime fiction that doesn't feel like it's trying to be anything but a great fucking story. There is no frill or filler here, no need to seem smarter than your average hard-boiled thriller. It just is. It's quiet when it needs to be, bloody as hell when the time is right, with enough surprises to keep things skipping along, but not so hung up on the whodunit that the story or the characters get pushed aside.

That's what I love about Piccirilli. He doesn't overplay his hand, he just writes. He doesn't tell you stories, his characters do. This was my fourth or fifth Tom Piccirilli book in the past year or so, and I'm clamoring for more. I look forward to catching up on his entire backlist, even if it doesn't compare to TLKW. Pic currently resides atop my list of favorite authors, cemented there by this book. Start reading this guy, right now. Start with this one, absorb it, revel in it, then go get more.
Profile Image for Zoeytron.
1,036 reviews895 followers
May 3, 2014
The ties that bind kinfolk together are strong, and three generations of the Rand family live under the same roof in this noirish tale. The Rands have a predilection for naming their offspring for breeds of dogs, and have always done so. It almost sounds silly, but it works here. The other thing they all have in common is their inherent talent for sneak thievery. The Rand boys became criminals because they were born to it. Even so, they have a code - no guns, no murders. There are lines you cross, and lines you don't. Collie Rand crossed the latter, turned mad-dog killer, and has been sentenced to death.

Primary characters are excellent, but the secondaries are not left out by any means. A dive bar called The Elbow Room has a tired old barfly who will blearily cough up information for the price of a dirty martini. Gramp is riddled with Alzheimer's, watches cartoons, has to be spoon-fed, but is still very much on top of his game when it comes to picking pockets. Confined to a wheelchair, he is lovingly cared for by the family.

This author is new to me, and I come away from this book mightily impressed. Will definitely be checking out more of his books and happily, there are several out there. If this story is any indication, he has a way of setting the reader right down in the big middle of everything. Very good!

Profile Image for Diane S ☔.
4,901 reviews14.6k followers
July 6, 2012
The Rand family has long been family of thieves, second story men but thieves who do not carry a gun. Until Collie Rand goes "down under" and slaughters innocent people. Terri Rand escaped from all the family anguish until he is called back by his brother, shortly before his brother is to be executed. This book definitely held my attention from beginning to end, it was an interesting concept told amazingly well. Somehow, at least for me, all the family members are extremely likable although some are harboring secrets that soon come to light. The bonds of family, what is owed to family and what one will do for family are at the forefront of this novel. Yet the suspense and the unraveling of this family and their secrets is what kept me reading. I highly recommend.
Profile Image for Gatorman.
724 reviews95 followers
August 1, 2012
This was, without question, one of the best books I've read in a while. The story of the Rand clan, a bunch of thieves and scam-artists all named after dogs, and the aftermath of one son's murderous rampage, is a smart, dark, intense tale that pulls no punches. The writing is spot-on and each character has a life of its own that you love getting to know despite feeling dirty just associating with them. What could have turned into another family member-turned Hardy Boy investigation into whether the murdering son really killed all of the victims (he claims on Death Row just a week before his executionon that one was not his victim) becomes so much more as family relationships become center stage. A complex story that was riveting from beginning to end. I will definitely be reading more from Piccirilli. Very highly recommended.
Profile Image for Benoit Lelièvre.
Author 6 books188 followers
May 10, 2012
Splendid novel. A credit to noirists all around the globe. THE LAST KIND WORDS brings some literary cred to the traditional noir landscapes. The Rand family are terrific characters, bound by blood and secrets. Tom Piccirilli takes ballsy decisions in this novel of including really common crime fiction tropes (killer-on-the-loose being one), but he handles them masterfully. They end up improving the story. This has been by far my favorite release this year and I am very confident this is an award winner. I was a fan of Piccirilli before, but now he's one of my favorites.
Profile Image for Michael.
851 reviews636 followers
June 25, 2012
I picked up this novel because I got an email from Amazon recommending this book because I liked Drive by James Sallis. While I didn’t believe it would be anything like Drive the synopsis did intrigue me. Terrier Rand grow up in a household of thieves and grifters; from a very young age Terry had been engaging in theft. He left his family and life to go straight but five years later has been dragged but when his brother is claiming to be innocent of one of the victims of his killing spree. His brother is only days away from execution and has asked his brother to look into one of the murders. He has pleaded guilty for all the other murders but the police won’t listen. Collie doesn’t want to the real killer to remain on the loose and even though Terry hates his brother and what he did, he finds himself investigating.

Terrier finds himself been sucked into a life he has tried really hard to escape. As the story slowly unfolds Terry begins to find out that maybe his grandfather was right when he told him; "We're born thieves, it's our nature, handed down to me, handed down from me. This is our way." Can Terry really escape a life of crime? Is Collie really guilty of this crime? Can Terry save his teenage sister from falling into a life of crime?

The Last Kind Words has some interesting family elements thought this novel; each member of the how is unique and interesting; even if they are all named after dogs. His father, Pinsch is a retired cat burglar, his uncles Mal and Grey are in trouble with the local mob and his Grandfather Old Shep maybe suffering from Alzheimer but still proving time and time again that he is a master pickpocket. Throughout the book the reader is left wondering if Terry should help his family or try and save himself; always questioning the importance of family, when your family can be so self destructive.

From the start I was hooked, this novel had a nice pace to it, mixing elements of crime and mystery with an interesting character driven story about love and family. While Tom Piccirilli did a wonderful job in writing a novel of suspense, guilt, justice and redemption, I never really understood Terry’s motivations. I get that he wanted to help his family and I get that the book is meant to question the reader but I just felt that the characters motivation never felt clear to begin with, he didn’t want to be there, he didn’t want to help his brother, in fact he hated his brother and never believed him, so it felt like obligation was the only reason to return, even though I thought that reason didn’t fit this character too well.

The Last Kind Words is an interesting book and well worth reading. Crime lovers will love the suspense and mystery throughout this book and literary lovers will love the character building and family turmoil in this novel. The narrative is atmospheric with a slight noir feel to it, personally I would have loved more of a noir narrative but Tom Piccirilli did a brilliant job writing this book anyway. One of better books I’ve read this year; I just had so much fun reading The Last Kind Words.
Profile Image for Ellis.
1,216 reviews166 followers
January 5, 2018
This is a damn fine book. I started it while watching golf on Labor Day & after about six pages, I turned to B & said, "This is a damn fine book." He said, "How can you know that already?" but you know how sometime you get six pages into something & you just know it's going to be absolutely worth your time? This involves a family of thieves who're all inexplicably named after dogs. This guy is named Pinscher, that guy is named Malamute, and, regrettably, that girl is named Airedale. Terrier is the narrator & he's just been to visit his brother Collie, who's in jail about to get a lethal injection. Although their family is its own little crime syndicate, stretching back to patriarch Grandpa Shepherd, they've got a moral code & it does not involve anything like Collie's murder of several innocent people. So the repercussions of these crimes are pretty much tearing everyone apart; that & all in all this is good enough that I am grudgingly looking forward to a possible sequel, even though I hate sequels.
Profile Image for Lou.
887 reviews922 followers
June 14, 2012
This story involves kin and crimes. Two brothers one incarcerated awaiting a needle of death. His has murdered eight people, a family of five on vacation, a gas-station attendant, an old lady beaten to death and a young woman strangled in a park. He killed them with no real motive mindless and senseless actions. His brother on the outside is also a thief and tries to piece together his brothers killing of one young girl and other girls recently murdered. He must get to the truth amongst the corruption present.
The brother finds himself watching out for his wayward sister who is in with the wrong crowd and chasing leads on recent murders. He has a hard time as he and his family are known for being career criminals it's in their blood.
As his grandfather once told him, "You're born thieves, it's your nature, handed down to me, handed down from me. This is our way."

As you follow the story to a closing discovery of truth I found at times the story was good but I wanted more. I have loved Piccirilli's recent novellas and they had a real hook and good pace this longer version a novel just was missing a hook an element to the story that could really make it that much better. A good story with characters that grow on you and the writing was presented in a nice a easy reading style. This story is more a reflection on the relationship with loved ones, those that have fallen in the pursuit of happiness.

Review also @ http://more2read.com/review/the-last-kind-words-tom-piccirilli/
Profile Image for Jenbebookish.
714 reviews198 followers
October 26, 2016
Wowza. This was a pleasant surprise. This is on my Karen-vibez shelf because it's one of the books I added to my to-read shelf based entirely upon the goodreads recommendation of a certain Karen Brissette, somebody who's reviews I absolutely LOVE, but have come to realize that it's a toss up whether or not I'll agree with her about books she loves. I've found her to be a tad bit more...generous with her stars and high opinions than I myself generally am. So I chose this one primarily because she'd sung its praises, but truthfully, also because it wasn't especially thick and the premise sounded basic enough that I thought it would be something easy to get into and easy to read. I just really couldn't figure out what I was in the mood for at the time, so I opted for something I thought would be EASY. A quickie! But in this instance I gotta say I totally agree with Karen, this thin slip of a book is so much more than it initially appears to be.

I am not a master of words the way Karen is, so I'll refrain from mucking things up too badly by trying to explain things, but I will say a few things about it, starting off with how much of a surprise this turned out to be. It was a slow burn tho, I made it almost half way thru before I really reeally started to like it. It's a really great character study, a story about a family of thieves with crime in their blood. The eldest brother Collie is up for execution following a crime spree that resulted in the death of 8 people, only now he's saying he didn't kill one of them. What difference does it make right? 7 still lands him the same needle. Only it does make a difference, a HUGE difference in fact. And that's the journey we go on with Terrier (yes they are all named after dogs. I thought it was cutesy at first, but by the end saw it as fitting) He's not exactly your most likable character, with a past full of cop outs, mistakes and crimes, but when the time comes, he shows up for his family and does what needs to be done. Smart, damaged, tough as nails...sounds like it's been done before, and it has, but the difference here is that Piccarilli does it well. Terrier is believable in every sense, his brokenness, his sharpness, the hard edge that comes with being born a thief. I felt for him without falling in love with him, and I rooted for him every step of the way, all the way to the story's inevitable conclusion.

Gritty, solid read. I was way stoked to realize there was a sequel.
Profile Image for JoAnne Pulcino.
663 reviews65 followers
July 22, 2012
THE LAST KIND WORDS

By Tom Piccirilli

This impressive creative title captured my imagination and became so integral to the plot and content of the book that it is one of the reasons I was drawn into and captured by this pitch perfect, action packed thriller.

This atmospheric noir novel has a cast of intriguing and fascinating characters. They are a charming family of anti heroes with all their idiosyncrasies. The reader is introduced to the Rand family who for generations have been grifters, card sharks, pick pockets, cat burglars and thieves. The originality of the characters, their names and their totally unique personalities complement the dark and brooding tale. Not since THE GODFATHER has a family of criminals been so appealing and mesmerizing.

Terrier Rand deserted his family after his older brother, Collie went on a mad killing spree, and was put on death row. Five years later and days before his execution Collie entreats Terrier to return home where he is set on a path that will create heartache, guilt, grief and stretch the fragile but deep rooted ties of the family.

This well written suspenseful novel of vivid action filled with family, love, violence, charm and corruption is one of a kind. It is a book you really don’t want to miss if you love great storytelling and books about unique perspectives and family bonds.

Bravo, Mr. Piccirilli

Profile Image for Sheri.
1,334 reviews
July 31, 2013
This is an over dramatic expository novel, but it was entertaining. It was poorly constructed, the characters are all very transparent and nothing is really surprising or all that compelling. The text is very preachy in the sense that the reader is repeatedly told things like, "we Rands don't do that" or "no one in the family ever talks to each other."

I found it annoying that they could supposedly read each other's minds so easily, but then Terry was always worried that Collie was lying to him. I was frustrated that ultimately the plot twist was that Alzheimer's makes you crazy (which it doesn't, not really and not in the sense of the "underneath").

The text was frequently overwritten as in: "That angry child's cry of want, I want. Mine. Mine. Mine. Thieves were a covetous lot by definition, but I wondered if anyone in my family had ever been as green-eyed and greedy as I was now." Blecch. Besides the bad description, I was really (and I mean really, really, really) tired of hearing about what thieves are and what they do by about the 10th page of the book. I was also rather fed up with all the self-pity and "I've failed my family yet again" garbage.

Overall there is nothing fabulous about it, but the story flows and it was a quick entertaining light book (well, except for the fact that the content isn't all that light).
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
Profile Image for Tim.
307 reviews21 followers
September 26, 2017
THE LAST KIND WORDS by author Tom Piccirilli is a book about Terrier Rand, a man from a close-knit family of career criminals whose income is derived from being burglars, grifters, petty thieves, card cheats, and other other forms of illicit income, albeit with one caveat; no guns, and who all share one common theme; they are all given a first name usually shortened to a nickname that is the breed of a dog.

Collie is Terry’s older brother, who is on death row and awaiting his upcoming execution, and who requests that Terry leave his anonymous life on a western cattle ranch to visit him, as Terry quietly disappeared in the wake of the horrible killing spree his brother committed resulting in his conviction, and the shame and family embarrassment being more than he could stand up to.

Terry is apprehensive and experiences mixed feelings regarding his brother, and his visit is very tense and is further aggravating when he finds the reason for his brother’s request as it is quite unusual.

Admission of the murder spree and taking responsibility for the deaths is something Collie never wavers on; except that now he’s come to believe that one of the murders he’s been accused of is a murder he didn’t commit, and that through his bride’s research(newlyweds/married after his incarceration) has unearthed the possibility of others murdered in a very similar way and the victims of a similar profile.

Terry’s initial anger and rejection of Collie’s request is eventually changed to curiosity and he does begin to look into this, only to find closed doors and anger from people he’s known in the past, either because of Collie’s horrific crimes, the lengthy criminal presence of his family, or Terry himself having run away from the situation hurting those who loved him the most.

Deep feelings from the past are unearthed as Terry tries to rekindle old family ties and relationships, at the same time he fears falling back into the old family lifestyle, and possibly becoming affected by the secretly guarded mental condition of several of the male members of the family for generations, making him wonder how much this is a factor in the behavior and actions of his brother, uncles, and grandfather; even to the point of being possibly responsible for Collie’s actions.

Will Terry be able to find the truth behind the one killing his brother claims isn’t committed by him, and will he succumb to the mental deterioration affecting his family whether he stays or goes?
Can he find forgiveness for having abandoned those who needed him most, or will he forever live his remaining days in shame?

Author Tom Piccirilli has written a powerful book that is not as much about the criminal actions of Terry and the entire Rand family; but rather an interesting view into their lives as people born into a life not chosen, yet something they naturally become part of with seemingly no escape from being part of.

Mental health being a subject that is very misunderstood by many, this book broaches the subject, and of culpability based on one’s mental capacity, something that will probably always be debatable in situations such as present in this book.

Great book, I recommend it to all, especially those who like stories that make you pull for the bad guys, since even most criminals have some good in them; however misplaced.

5 stars.
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
Profile Image for April .
964 reviews9 followers
September 4, 2018
Very appealing, conflicted protagonist and a gripping page-turner of a plot makes this first in the series a must read. Terrier returns home to a devastated family and dies what he can to put it right.
Profile Image for Larry H.
3,066 reviews29.6k followers
January 27, 2013
So let's get this out of the way: nearly every member of the main family in this book, The Rands, are named for dog breeds. It's a somewhat bizarre affectation that sometimes proves a little distracting, but don't let that stop you from reading this fantastic, brooding book from Tom Piccirilli.

Terry (Terrier) Rand was born into a family of thieves. His father, Pinsch (Pinscher), was a cat burglar who never seemed entirely enamored of the life; his uncles, Mal (Malamute) and Grey (Greyhound), always larger-than-life presences as he grew up, have expertise as card sharks; even his grandfather, Shep (Shepherd), in the throes of Alzheimer's, used to be a force to be reckoned with, and his fingers can still pick a pocket fairly well from time to time. Terry had no choice but to fall into the life, running scams (mostly successfully), running with—and sometimes against—the local crime family.

Terry fled his family's Long Island home five years ago, after his older brother, Collie, went on a murderous rage that left eight people dead. Collie and Terry were more like combative rivals than brothers; Collie wanted—and took—everything that Terry had, and left him holding the bag on more than one occasion. Terry left without warning and never contacted his family, even leaving his fiancée, Kimmy, behind. But now Collie is only days from his execution, and he has had Terry summoned home.

Collie lets Terry know that while he is guilty of seven murders, he did not kill a young woman whose death he is also accused of. Although he never disputed it during his trial, he has learned that other young women who looked similar to his victim have met a similar end. While he isn't interested in a new trial or a stay of execution, he wants Terry to investigate and find out the truth.

But the truth—of this crime, and his difficult relationship with Collie and his family—is something Terry isn't quite ready to delve into again. He finds himself falling back into familiar patterns, as he runs afoul of the local crime family who are now onto his uncles; tries to fight the tide of crime that holds him in its thrall; worries about his teenage sister, who is on the verge of entering the same life as the rest of their family; and relives the pain and anguish he felt in leaving Kimmy behind. He knows he needs to break free of all of this, but can't, and while he can't understand what Collie's real motivation for calling him back to town was, he can't resist trying to find out the truth, no matter where it leads.

The Last Kind Words is a meditation on the power of family and how strong the ties that bind us are, no matter how hard we struggle to fight or how far we run to flee them. Terry is smart enough to know where he will go wrong but finds himself powerless to stop heading in that direction.

I've been a big fan of Piccirilli's books for a while now, and this is a truly fantastic one, full of crackling violence, suspense, and brooding introspection that really works. There is always an undercurrent of violence simmering just underneath the surface of the story, and Piccirilli's writing style leaves you wondering just how things will unfold. How far will Terry find himself twisted in the knots of his family and his past?

This is a smart, tremendously well-written crime novel that is more introspective than most, but it still has enough tension and violence to satisfy. So put the whole dog names thing out of your mind, and settle in for a fantastic read.
Profile Image for AlcoholBooksCinema.
66 reviews7 followers
April 1, 2016
When you see a person who meets his brother after half-decade and the veins in his wrist are tricked away, black and twisted at his brother's presence, you instantly realize there are some things unsettled between them and there is an emptiness to be filled.

Nobody grabs an opportunity like a thief. We all doubt our capabilities, but thieves don't. It is rare that we catch someone stealing our wallet. Movies about thieves are very spectacular to watch, but the scene of realizing there's no wallet in your pocket when you are about to pay the bill, isn't. Especially when you are at a supermarket and there is a long line of frustrated faces behind you waiting. Believe me, it happened to a friend.

Some kind words: Meticulous story telling. Everything that was written in the book had something to do with the relationships and murders enclosed by the mystery. Can't think of anything that bored me in the book, maybe the only thing I was concerned by, when I picked the book I thought it was a story about the person who went full retard, but it rolled out to be a story about the affinities of a family, nonetheless, that's not much of a concern considering this was so splendidly written.

Profile Image for Eric.
435 reviews37 followers
April 14, 2017
Tom Piccirilli's The Last Kind Words is a crime novel that introduces the reader to the Rand family. The Rand family is a well established family known for generations for its skills of thievery and cons. Oddly, each male is also named after a dog.

The main character in the novel, Terrier Rand, absent and out of touch away from the family for over five years, has been requested to come home at the request of his spree-killer brother, currently on death row.

The Rand family consists of a group of interesting characters, from that of a traditional, care giving matriarch, to a rebelling younger sister and a pair of trouble making uncles, all of which add layers to the story.

Throughout the novel, Pickirilli sprinkles in a wide variety of characters to move the story along.

This is the first Tom Piccirilli novel I have read and the first involving the Rand family, with The Last Whisper in the Dark being a follow up involving Terry Rand.

The Last Kind Words is a solid novel with interesting characters, an interesting plot and side plots. Characters in the novel also did not feel like their roles were created just to the move the story along, but to engage the reader in a way to build concern for the fictional character.

Highly recommended.
Profile Image for Stephen.
623 reviews182 followers
August 15, 2015
Enjoyed this one - probably my favourite of the late great Tom's books.
Similar to the Cold Spot with its dysfunctional criminal family but slightly better story and characters (including the dog). Also got the sequel so will be reading that one pretty soon too.
Profile Image for Kathy.
3,856 reviews288 followers
February 25, 2019
I had never heard of this author and probably would not have but for Goodreads. Whatever genre his books were listed under, they missed me. I surprised myself by enjoying reading about a family of criminals. I would have bopped right into the following book about Terrier Rand, the last one this author wrote before his death, I believe...but I have a bunch in my reading queue I must read before expiration of loans.
Some pretty hard core crime gets spotlighted within a family that previously had not used guns and supposedly were not out for killing, just your average stealing. Well....think again. Terrier is hard not to sympathize with as the leading character. Piccirilli was a gifted writer.
Profile Image for Josh.
1,730 reviews173 followers
July 4, 2013
Terry Rand has generational crime imbedded in his DNA; his family an accomplished band of thieves, his brother a vicious murderer on death row. Following his brothers conviction, Rand hits the road and seeks the straight and narrow only to be called back into his former life when news of his brothers execution reaches him and his brother, Collie, lures him into proving his innocence for one of the alleged murders, a young girl.

Tom Piccirilli is one of my favourite authors and THE LAST KIND words is further evidence of his supreme talent. I found myself caring for each character and feeling every emotionally confronting moment as if I were there. This is not a warm-hearted novel even though the family aspect is paramount to the plot. This is a story of a family in crisis where one son is on death row, the other recently returned only to be a kind of catalyst for further grief despite his best intentions. The Rands feel as though their world has come crashing down and I couldn't help but feel for their predicament. Yes they are a lawless family but Piccirilli instils so many redeeming qualities and gives each member such deep characterisation that a glimmer of light can be seen through the veil of darkens within.
Profile Image for Skip.
3,824 reviews576 followers
April 22, 2013
Part of a family of small-time thieves and grifters, Terrier (Terry) Rand flees west after his older brother, Collie, goes on a killing spree, abandoning the love of his life Kimmy, who has just miscarried. Days before his brother's scheduled execution, Collie asks Terry to return home to help stop a serial killer, who actually murdered one of his victims. Collie's claim is partially substantiated by the kisses on all but one of the victims. Terry comes back to town and starts investigating, worried sick that the family's craziness is hereditary and that he too will succumb to the "underneath." Taught thriller. Terry's grandfather, Old Shep, who has Alzheimer’s but is still a first-rate pickpocket, is a hoot.
Displaying 1 - 30 of 335 reviews

Can't find what you're looking for?

Get help and learn more about the design.