I featured a couple of his books a few years ago and in the intervening years never got around to reading them - more fool me, I reckon - 2 BY LES EDGERTON
From his blog, Edgerton says about himself.....

Les Edgerton's The Bitch was read and enjoyed a few years ago - review here
Other LE titles that sit on the stacks are The Rapist, Just Like That, The Death of Tarpons, Monday's Meal, The Genuine Imitation Plastic Kidnapping, The Perfect Crime, Gumbo Ya Ya
Les Edgerton has his blog here.
Bomb (2016)
When criminal genius Charles "Reader" Kincaid accidentally alerts a retired cop to the impending commission of the perfect crime, the crime becomes a lot less perfect.
The plan is to wire a prominent banker with a remote control bomb and thereby capture untold millions from a dangerous drug czar. Or is the plan something else? The plot thickens as hidden family connections come to light and who is betraying who - and why - becomes a matter of life and death for perpetrators and victims alike.
With wry wit and first-hand knowledge of the underworld, author Les Edgerton unleashes a cast of quirky characters and dark ambitions that collide in a tale nothing short of explosive.
Raves about Les Edgerton and BOMB:
"Les Edgerton has swiftly become my favorite crime writer. Original voice, uncompromising attitude and a pure hardboiled style leap him to the front ranks of my reading list. He will become legendary."
- Joe R. Lansdale, Paradise Sky, The Bottoms, Edge of Dark Water, The Thicket, the Hap and Leonard series, the books behind the TV series of the same name, and many others
"Les Edgerton is the new High King of Noir."
- Ken Bruen, The Emerald Lie, The Guards, Pimp and many others
"Edgerton commits the perfect crime story."
- Dietrich Kalteis, Triggerfish, The Deadbeat Club and Ride the Lightning
* Bomb I've since realised is a sexy re-issue of an earlier book The Perfect Crime. Oh well...
Lagniappe (2017)

“Reading Les Edgerton’s stories is like listening to those old World War II broadcasts from the London blitz, with the reporter crouching under a restaurant table, microphone in hand, while the bombs drop on the city and the ceiling caves in. Edgerton reports on the world and the news is not good. There’s a kind of wacky wisdom in these bulletins from the underside of life; the stories are full of people you hope never move in next door, for whom ordinary life is an impossible dream. This is good fiction; Edgerton writes lean and nasty prose.” —Dr. Francois Camoin, Director, Graduate School of English, University of Utah and author of Benbow and Paradise, Like Love, But Not Exactly, Deadly Virtues, The End of the World Is Los Angeles and Why Men Are Afraid of Women
I have a few books like that, too, Col - books I've had for a few years and (still!) have't read. These sound good, and I'll be interested in what you think of them when you get to them.
ReplyDeleteMargot thanks. I think I've been ignoring Mr Edgerton for too long!
DeleteThey look interesting, and like two very different books based on the covers.
ReplyDeleteI like that the author can excel at both the novel and short stories.
DeleteCol – I’ve yet to read Edgerton. After reading the bio you posted, I need to move him to the top of the TBR pile. Thanks.
ReplyDeleteHe's an interesting guy Elgin. His fiction smacks of a life filled with experience.
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