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Book cover of The Devil's Right Hand
Detective Fiction, Other Romance Categories, Thrillers, Crimes - Fiction, Crime Fiction, Other Mystery Categories

The Devil's Right Hand

by J. D. Rhoades
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Overview

The Devil's Right Hand is the story of Jack Keller, a man tormented by the nightmares he's had ever since a disastrous tour in Desert Storm. Destroyed by his experience, Keller now makes his living tracking bailjumpers for H&H, a North Carolina bail bonds company run by a reclusive, beautiful, and horribly scarred woman named Angela. In truth, Keller doesn't work bail enforcement to live, he lives to work: the only thing that breaks through the numbness is the thrill of the hunt, the sound of gunfire, the high that comes with each successful takedown.

When H&H is required to track down a lifelong loser for jumping bail on a routine burglary collar, Keller has no idea how gravely events are about to spiral out of his control. He chases his quarry straight into the center of a firestorm involving a pair of local Indians blinded by rage and hell-bent to avenge their father's murder. Along the way they encounter a vicious North Carolina cop with a mean streak and very few moral boundaries. Not to mention the cop's beautiful partner Marie, caught between a newfound desire for the just-on-the-edge-of-the-law Jack Keller and her loyalty to a police department with a serious ethics problem.

These people, each hurtling forward on their own individual trajectories of self-destruction, begin to intersect each other's lives in a series of volatile, escalating, and deadly events. Furiously paced and filled with unforgettable, masterfully drawn characters destined to meet in a bloody showdown which most of them will not survive, The Devil's Right Hand is a stylish, razor-edged debut novel that redefines the rules of the Southern thriller.

About the Author, J. D. Rhoades

J.D. Rhoades lives and practices law in Carthage, North Carolina, where he is at work on a follow-up to The Devil's Right Hand.

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Editorials

Patrick Anderson

Although The Devil's Right Hand is nicely crafted, I don't expect it to win many prizes. But if you hail from certain dark corners of the sunny South, it's the next best thing to a trip home.
β€” The Washington Post

Publishers Weekly

Loaded with testosterone and high-caliber weapons, Rhoades's hard-boiled debut lurches from one bloody gun battle to another in the streets and back alleys of Fayetteville, N.C., as a bounty hunter finds himself drawing highly unwelcome attention. When dim-witted cousins DeWayne and Leonard kill an old Lumbee Indian during their first armed robbery, they get a load of trouble along with the cash. Raymond, one of the victim's sons and a vicious local crime boss, vows to kill everyone involved with his father's death. Caught in between is Jack Keller, a bail bondsman's enforcer; he's after DeWayne for skipping out on his breaking and entering bail. A Gulf War veteran tormented by guilt over the deaths of his squad members in a friendly fire incident, Jack must now deal with the two armed robbers, crazed Raymond and his gang of assorted Colombian gunmen, and sadistic cops who mistakenly think he's the cause of all the mayhem. Resourceful and determined, Jack happily lays out a few bad guys himself, but he's annoyed that everybody wants to kill him, too. He is arrested, beaten up, shot at and pursued, making miraculous escapes each time in the best pulp fiction tradition. Add spectacular car chases, kidnapping, torture, carjacking, a dozen killings and lukewarm sex scenes, and this gritty novel has everything it needs except for suspense, mystery and likable characters. Agent, Scott Miller. (Jan. 19) Copyright 2004 Reed Business Information.

Kirkus Reviews

A hard-boiled debut about a bounty hunter everybody loves to hunt, especially cops. There's something about Jack Keller, embittered Gulf War vet and peerless bail bondsman, that sticks in the collective craw of the Fayetteville, North Carolina PD. Maybe it's his attitude: a look in his eye that seems to say he's cut tougher-than-you down to size. Jack's trying to nail Dwayne Puryear, who's skipped on a Breaking and Entering, when suddenly he's being rousted. Officer Wesson, virtuoso of the kidney-battering baton, hauls Jack into court on a spurious charge of resisting arrest. Bailed out by his beautiful, enigmatic boss, Jack resumes pursuit of the evasive Dwayne, who, partnered with his even more thuggish cousin Leonard, has moved up from B&E to Armed Robbery, a mistake with violent ramifications. For the sake of his modest payroll, the Puryears have murdered the elderly, inoffensive owner of a small cutting-and-hauling business whose sons turn out to be a pair of extremely vengeful Lumbee Indians. The latter pair chases the former, catching Jack in between. Bullets fly, body bags fill, and the plot thickens, but character development remains on hold. Jack's first is better than run-of-the-mill, though not by a lot. Agent: Scott Miller/Trident Media Group

Book Details

Published
December 1, 2004
Publisher
St. Martin's Minotaur
Pages
288
Format
Hardcover
ISBN
9780312334192

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