The sensational debut of a crime novelist who will remind readers of how thrilling it was to read Carl Hiassen, Robert B. Parker, or Elmore Leonard for the first time. This novel features Mackin, a rogue and a professional thief who survives by being the very best--and by never breaking his own rules.
Patrick Quinn is a writer of thriller fiction. His first novel, "Thick As Thieves," was published in 1995. In 2000, it was made into a movie by HBO Productions.
Quinn lives in Lawrence, Kansas and is presently completing his second book.
A decent quick crime/revenge novel, but not something to go out of the way for. It's predictable, except where it's so vague that I kept flipping back to figure out if I missed something: are we in Chicago still? Why are the stolen food stamps suddenly worthless just because the framed guy got away? How does two dead cops chalk up to the worst cop killing in Chicago history? Is it because it wasn't actually in Chicago but Quinn couldn't make it clear? The book would have benefited from being a smidge longer in order to be a smidge clearer, but that wouldn't have fixed the main problem, which is the shallow-as-raindrops main character. It was pretty impressive how much plot Quinn stuffed in to under three hundred pages; it would have been nice with a simpler plot and just a hair more depth in...really, any of the characters at all.