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"May well be his best." --"The Philadelphia Inquirer"
"You'll find the usual deft Leonard touches -- the dialogue that sounds like it was copied off the police blotter, the instructive fascination with minor details, the twists and turns and sudden, nasty violence that somehow seems casual.... You won't be able to avoid it, nor should you." --"St. Louis Post-Dispatch"
"Leonard delivers. "Bandits" is...the best thing he's done.... The language reeks of the street -- and the convent. The words fit the characters. And the characters are stunning."" --Houston Chronicle"
""Bandit" crackles like a brown paper bag pulled up around a half pint." --"Atlanta Constitution"
"Almost unbearable suspense. Leonard has produced another winner." --"People"
--This text refers to an alternate Paperback edition.
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
10 of 12 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars
From the Leonard Reviews: Strange and derivative,
By Samuel Louis "raisindot" (Natick, MA USA) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Bandits (Paperback)
Elmore Leonard gets religion (and philosophy) in "Bandits," one of his least satisfying works. He recycles his classic character types: Jack Delaney, the cool, collected ex-con having a hard time adjusting to civilian life; Sister Lucy, the good girl/bad girl who claims to be a nun but isn't above criminal intent, and a Nicaraguan heavy who is pretty much a carbon copy of the Dominican heavy from "Cat Chaser." Through a slug-paced story that lacks the usual Leonard crackle, we get ample doses of Catholic philosophy, superficial New Orleans 'atmosphere,' a "will they or won't they" tease that ends up being boring after awhile, until the usual Leonard fireworks end the tale. If you are going through the Leonard canon, I recommend leaving "Bandits" at the bottom of your "to-read" list.
3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars
Not his best,
By
This review is from: Bandits (Hardcover)
Elmore Leonard has been lauded as America's greatest living crime writer and having read all of his crime books, I can see why. However, Bandits is clearly not one of Leonard's better works. Leonard claims that he never knows how his books will end, that he lets the characters lead him. In the case of Bandit's it they do not lead him to any strong finish. The characters are always the best part of any Leonard novel, and this cast is rather boring.
In an earlier review, a reader commented that this was an "issue" book and cited both Pagan Babies and Cat Chaser as being in the same category. While Pagan Babies (an excellent read) and Cat Chaser (also good) may have both had issues or causes woven into the story, neither of these suffered from the boring cast of characters and slow moving plot that Bandits did. Fortunately this kind of disappointment is rare with Leonard's works.
3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars
Dialog, dialog, dialog,
By
This review is from: Bandits (Paperback)
Superficially, "Bandits" is a caper novel, and not a particularly good one. What saves it is Leonard's characters and especially their dialog. Ignore the plot -- Just sit back, relax, observe, and in particular listen to the characters.
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