A quick read that lacks depth. But still, it's kind of fun... well, maybe not precisely. I was ready for the story to be over, and was sourly disappointed with the ending. So maybe I'd call this a greasy spoon burger book.
On the cover, it states "Grifters with issues." This made me laugh, then it prompted me to lookup the word. It's a good word. If you don't know it, slide that fat dictionary off the shelf and put it to use. Wait. Do folks still use dictionaries and bookshelves? I do, but I'm not the typical techno-wizard with a pocketful of Google.
This book is all about cons. Cons within cons within cons. The pacing is brisk, the writing is somewhat clipped, and the story turns stale the more you read. I was hoping for characters with a bit more depth, but we can't have everything we want.
In the end, this book was like eating a cheap cheeseburger topped with pale lank lettuce and thick loose slabs of aging onions. The first bite tastes good because you're starved. You happily bolt down the pieces of meat and bun, knowing you should slow down but not caring. You're a'hungry. You guzzle bubbling Coke from a sweating finger smudged glass, mash greasy fries between salty lips, and then bury your teeth in the burger again. During mastication, you experience a fat and sodium food high. When you finally push away from that scuffed Formica and slump back in that fat-bottom booth, its sunk coils a bit too forgiving, heartburn is already slinking in at the edges.
But sometimes, it's okay to eat a meal like this, or read a book like this. You just don't want to make it a regular thing.
Despite my 2-star rating, I still had fun, or something akin to fun. If you're looking for a quick rainy-day kind of read, this will do the trick nicely.