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Two tough-guy brothers from New Jersey arrive in Waikiki on a mission. Their target is a local politician, who needs to be "persuaded" to back the construction of a beach casino. But the Jersey boys soon discover they've vastly underestimated the local underworld. Soon they're in danger of becoming victims of their own scheme.
In spring, 1934, John Dillinger made his infamous "wooden gun" escape from an Indiana prison. Within 24 hours he had found a hideout in Minnesota's Twin Cities. The Resurrection of John Dillinger is a novel based on the last spring of Dillinger's life, between that prison escape and the firefight at Little Bohemia. The story opens on Easter Saturday 1934, when federal agents trapped Dillinger and Billie Frechette in a Saint Paul apartment. Dillinger is wounded but recovers after help from Saint Paul gangsters and a Minneapolis doctor. The novel also follows the two historical characters who helped Dillinger hide out after his Indiana jailbreak. In helping Dillinger, those two, Bess Green and Patrick Reilly, are in far more trouble than they can handle. Bess will become one of the key informers of the Public Enemies era. Patrick will narrowly escape at Little Bohemia, and loyal to the underworld, will pay dearly for his silence. The Resurrection of John Dillinger is the fifth and final book in a series of historically-accurate novels about the gangster era.
Hoping to get sent home from Vietnam, pacifist GI Jay Peckfogle gets an insult tattooed on his saluting hand. This only earns him a transfer to Army Limbo. There he is assigned to write condolence letters to the families of GIs who have been killed in the war. But his quiet, dull life in a bunker is interrupted by a street gangster named Crocodile. Peckfogle's pacifist beliefs are challenged when Crocodile threatens his girlfriend.
During a howling blizzard in March, 1932, Sadie and Rose, two hard luck women from out of town, are found murdered and burned on the banks of the Mississippi. Bootlegger Mick Powers was among the last to see them alive, and embarks on a dark and dangerous inquiry into who murdered the girls.
In this second book of the series, bootlegger Mick Powers is trying to survive his reluctant association with the Barker-Karpis gang. It's Christmas, 1932 and the gang has targeted a Minneapolis bank. Mick is the "jug marker" who sets up what he hopes is a bloodless robbery. But when the Barker gang hooks up with the madman known as The Chopper, things quickly go wrong.
This historically-accurate novel details the Gangster Era kidnapping of wealthy brewer William Hamm. The culprits were the Barker-Karpis gang, in association with Capone mobsters. The novel also details the corrupt involvement of the local police.
Mick Powers, wanted in Saint Paul, is living on the lam deep in the quiet woods of Wisconsin. Just after New Year's, his phone starts ringing with phantom calls. Then one snowy afternoon, a dark sedan lumbers down his driveway. Mick's dogs go into a frenzy of barking, trying to tell him that the visitors are big trouble. Out of that sedan pops Alvin Karpis, Fred Barker and his brother Doc. They say they only want a small favor. So begins an unwanted adventure that finds Mick involved in the final crime of the Barker Gang's long and deadly career.
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