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A gambling man  Cover Image Book Book

A gambling man / David Baldacci.

Baldacci, David, (author.).

Summary:

The 1950s are on the horizon, and Archer is in dire need of a fresh start after a nearly fatal detour in Poca City. So Archer hops on a bus and begins the long journey out west to California, where rumor has it there is money to be made if you're hard-working, lucky, criminal -- or all three. Archer's first stop is a P.I. office where he is hoping to apprentice with a legendary private eye and former FBI agent named Willie Dash. He lands the job, and immediately finds himself in the thick of a potential scandal: a blackmail case involving a wealthy well-connected politician running for mayor that soon spins into something even more sinister. As bodies begin falling, Archer and Dash must infiltrate the world of brothels, gambling dens, drug operations, and long-hidden secrets, descending into the rotten bones of a corrupt town that is selling itself as the promised land -- but might actually be the road to perdition, and Archer's final resting place.

Record details

  • ISBN: 9781538719671
  • Physical Description: 438 pages ; 24 cm
  • Publisher: New York : Grand Central Publishing, 2021
Subject: Private investigators > Fiction.
Gamblers > Fiction.
Extortion > Fiction.
Murder > Investigation > Fiction.
California > Fiction.
Genre: Suspense fiction.
Historical fiction.

Available copies

  • 29 of 33 copies available at BC Interlibrary Connect. (Show)
  • 1 of 1 copy available at Fort St. James Public Library.

Holds

  • 1 current hold with 33 total copies.
Show Only Available Copies
Location Call Number / Copy Notes Barcode Shelving Location Holdable? Status Due Date
Fort St. James Public Library BAR (Archer #2) (Text) 35196000295035 Adult Fiction Volume hold Available -

  • Booklist Reviews : Booklist Reviews 2021 May #1
    In One Good Deed (2019), Baldacci introduced readers to WWII veteran Aloysius Archer. An ex-con on parole, Archer was forced to solve a murder in order to clear his own name. Now, with 1950 just around the corner, Archer is in Bay Town, California, working for a famous private eye. Soon he's knee-deep in a conspiracy that involves a local politician. Murder quickly follows. Archer and his employer, former FBI agent Willie Dash, put their lives on the line to expose the corruption that's rotting Bay Town from the inside out. Baldacci, whose novels range from hits (the Sean King/Michelle Maxwell series) to misses (the John Puller series), definitely is onto something with Archer. He's a very interesting guy, in a rough-and-tumble way, and Baldacci renders Archer's postwar world with the kind of vivid detail that catches a reader's eye—a flash of color here, a particularly good description there—just enough to set the scene without getting in the way of the narrative. Familiarity with One Good Deed is not required, but readers new to the series will definitely want to catch up on what they've missed. Copyright 2021 Booklist Reviews.
  • BookPage Reviews : BookPage Reviews 2021 May
    Whodunit: May 2021

    Two 1940s-set mysteries, a striking new series and a real doozy of a final twist await you in this month's Whodunit column.

    A Gambling Man

    To be known by only one name lends a certain je ne sais quoi to the stature of a hard-boiled PI. It has worked well for Andrew Vachss' dark avenger Burke and Robert B. Parker's sybaritic strongman Spenser, and it works just fine for David Baldacci's mononymous sleuth Archer. It doesn't hurt that Archer's second outing, the 1949-set A Gambling Man, takes place during the gumshoe golden age, when men smoked "Luckies," drove luxurious European roadsters and were pursued by women of rapier wit. Archer is an ex-con, so some shenanigans are required to obtain a license to ply his trade in his new home of California. The ink isn't even dry on said license before he's assigned his first case, an extortion attempt on a mayoral candidate in the seaside community of Bay Town. Then an alluring chanteuse who was connected to the case is brutally murdered. It will not be the last death to rock Bay Town, and the newly minted PI's mettle will truly be tested. Baldacci establishes bona fides for this historical mystery with great delicacy, deftly navigating the cliche minefield and giving his readers a sense of the milieu without drowning them in minutiae. He delivers a cracking good suspense novel in the process.

    Thief of Souls

    Brian Klingborg's Thief of Souls features one of the best opening sentences I have ever read in a mystery: "On the night the young woman's corpse is discovered, hollowed out like a birchbark canoe, Inspector Lu Fei sits alone in the Red Lotus bar, determined to get gloriously drunk." Lu Fei is a deputy police chief in Raven Valley, a backwater township in northeast China, close to the North Korean border. Not much happens in Raven Valley as a rule, but that somnolence is about to be upended. Almost immediately after the victim is discovered, a suspect is identified: a wannabe boyfriend whose phone yields surreptitious photos of the young woman and whose job in a meatpacking plant would afford him access to the sort of surgical knife that was used to eviscerate her. The city police officer called in to take over the investigation wants a quick solution to the case and is perfectly willing to let the "boyfriend" fill that bill. But Lu has doubts, and he conducts a quiet side investigation that turns up additional unsolved killings with the same modus operandi. Politics and turf wars ensue as Klingborg, who has lived and worked in Asia, peppers the story with narrative detours into Chinese history and pertinent commentary from the likes of Confucius, Mao Tse-tung and other Chinese philosophical luminaries. This auspicious mystery begs for a sequel. Please let it be soon. 

    A Peculiar Combination

    The title of Ashley Weaver's series starter, A Peculiar Combination, is a sly reference to the main character's occupation as an opener of locked boxes—and more specifically, locked boxes that do not belong to her. Set in London during World War II, the novel opens as Electra McDonnell, safecracker extraordinaire, and her mentor, Uncle Mick, get nabbed in a sting operation set up by a British spy agency. They'll be given a Get Out of Jail Free card if they participate in a government-sanctioned safe heist in which some phony sensitive papers will be substituted for the real documents, thus misleading the Nazis. It all goes hopelessly awry when they arrive at the scene of the would-be crime and discover the safe is wide open, its owner dead on the floor. In the wake of this failure, Electra finds herself in the unusual (for her) position of wanting to see the operation through to its conclusion, even though she's been freed from her contract with the government. In for a penny, in for a pound and all that. It's a lighter read than many a mystery with the same setting, but A Peculiar Combination delivers the requisite suspense and misdirection that will keep the hard-boiled crowd on board as well.

    ★ The Final Twist

    Jeffery Deaver's The Final Twist lives up to its name admirably, even delivering said twist on the very last page of the book. (Don't cheat by looking at the ending.) Main character Colter Shaw could scarcely be more different from Deaver's famous sleuth, the brilliant forensic consultant Lincoln Rhyme. Colter is a mountaineer and a survivalist; he's action-oriented where Rhyme is cerebral. And unlike Rhyme, who works closely with law enforcement, if Colter has to bend the law to serve his ends, he will do it without remorse. He supports himself by finding missing people and collecting the reward money. His life's mission, however, is finishing his father's work and destroying BlackBridge, a mercenary corporation that has been distributing drugs in a San Francisco neighborhood to drive down property values so they can swoop in and purchase tracts for pennies on the dollar. Shaw strongly suspects that BlackBridge had a hand in his father's "accidental" death, and he means to dispense some Old West justice once he finds out the truth. A couple of subplots, one involving Colter's long-lost brother and another centered on a legal document from a century ago that may have a breathtaking impact on modern-day California politics, flesh out the narrative, distracting the reader until Deaver wallops them with the shocking final page. 

    Copyright 2021 BookPage Reviews.
  • Publishers Weekly Reviews : PW Reviews 2021 April #4

    After a contrivance-filled opening, bestseller Baldacci's entertaining sequel to 2019's One Good Deed finishes strong. In 1949, WWII veteran and ex-con Aloysius Archer is headed for Bay Town, Calif., where he hopes to get a job with a PI firm, when he decides to stop in Reno, Nev. After refusing a stranger's request to protect the man from his enemies, Archer wins big at roulette and befriends Liberty Callahan, a café dancer who hopes to become a Hollywood star. When Archer and Callahan stumble on three thugs assaulting the man in need of protection, Callahan shows off her firearms skill. Archer and Callahan decide to travel together, but more violence ensues before the pair reach Bay Town. There, Archer is hired by the PI firm, which has been retained by a mayoral candidate to thwart a blackmailer threatening to expose his extramarital affair. Multiple murders follow. Baldacci provides a nicely twisted motive for the homicides, though the prose can be purple ("Smoke curled off the end of the cigarillo and lifted to the sky like a fragment of a memory gone to Heaven"). Fans of classic L.A. noir will be satisfied. Agent: Aaron Priest, Aaron M. Priest Literary. (Apr.)

    Copyright 2021 Publishers Weekly.

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