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10 of 10 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Darkly funny and action packed
Head Games is a darkly funny and action packed story that introduces crime writer Hector Lassiter. Hector is a hard drinking hard living man's man who has worn himself out from self abuse, but doesn't want to slow down. And in this book, he doesn't have much choice anyway.

Hector has come into possession of the skull of Pancho Villa. Like Rick's transit...
Published on October 23, 2007 by L. Turner

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3 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Travels with Hector
Surreal. Unusual. Imaginative. Confusing. These are some of the reactions to this strange novel. The back cover of the ARC states: "Head Games is equal parts road novel, caper, and historical fiction: a black comedy and wistful ballad of lost America rooted in borderland myth and history." Hyperbole enough? If not, then reading the novel will supply more...
Published on October 5, 2007 by Ted Feit


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10 of 10 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Darkly funny and action packed, October 23, 2007
By 
L. Turner (Tallahassee, FL, USA) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: Head Games (Hardcover)
Head Games is a darkly funny and action packed story that introduces crime writer Hector Lassiter. Hector is a hard drinking hard living man's man who has worn himself out from self abuse, but doesn't want to slow down. And in this book, he doesn't have much choice anyway.

Hector has come into possession of the skull of Pancho Villa. Like Rick's transit visas in Casablanca, it seems that Hector will never be lonely as long as he has that infamous skull. He is pursued across Mexico and California by federales, frat boys, and the father of a future Presidential dynasty. Along the way, Hector makes time to visit old friends like Marlene Dietrich and Orson Welles who are in the middle of filming noir classic "A Touch of Evil." Towards the end of the book, we even get to meet a young man named George W at the Skull and Bones Tomb on the campus at Yale.

The book is a great read on many levels. There is enough action, cussing, and violence to satisfy Quenton Tarantino. But this is a thinking person's novel too. There are literal and figurative "Head Games" going on thoughout the book. Hector Lassiter is trying to plot his way out of his predicament like he would plot one of his own crime novels. He succeeds on some levels, but finds that he is unable to control the people he comes in contact with the same way he can control characters in his novels.

Author McDonald maintains complete control over an amazing cast of characters in "Head Games." The plot and the writing will keep you turning the pages. The clever and ironic dialogue will keep you smiling.

If you like crazy road stories filled with wild characters (a la Kerouac), with a secretive and manipulative organization out to get the main character (think DaVinci Code in Connecticut), along with the sense of humor of Comedy Central's Daily Show, you will love this novel.
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5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Legendary Fun, October 16, 2007
This review is from: Head Games (Hardcover)
Head, head, who's got the head?

Ok, it really is a book about people chasing other people who may or may not have Pancho Villa's head. It really is, no kidding. And with that absurd premise Craig McDonald has written a book that actually works as a boisterous, thrill filled action adventure that is a blast to read.

The legend of Villa's head being stolen by Harvard's Skull and Bones Society has been documented throughout the years. It was brought up during the Presidential campaign because rumor had it that Preston Bush- yup, of those Bushes- was involved at the time. McDonald uses these myths to form the basis for the aptly titled Head Games. He creates a hard boiled crime writer, his newbie interviewer, a beautiful Mexican girl and throws them into the middle of the fight for possession of Villa's decapitated head (now a skull.) It is filled with car chases, lots of blood and a little love.

Head Games is a novel with a strong plot, characters who are characters and plenty of action. Lines like "But talking about your plans is the surest way to make God laugh " prove McDonald's writing prowess. This also shows one of the book's strengths- it sense of humor. McDonald never takes his characters seriously, he lets them run amok with just enough leash on them to prevent them from getting totally out of hand. His crime writer, Lassiter, hangs out with the big wigs of the 1950s- Hemingway, Dietrich and Welles are all brought into the scene. The plot thread that has Lassiter not speaking to Hemingway over a past argument adds a fun touch of fictitious realism. The pile of bodies grows, the number of enemies is ever increasing and the chase seems never ending. And characters from history traipse through the pages, recapturing their forgotten place in our little remembered past.

The other surprising strength of the book is its ending, Book 2. It has its end of the adventure, culminating climax that is expected. But the continuation of the story through the years to the book's and the story's actual ending is a charming twist. It adds pathos and emotion to the over all appeal and depth to the book. Unexpected yet appreciated.

Bleak House has again found an author and his book that is just off the norm into the creative and diverse. Head Games is a serous bit of black hearted tomfoolery that entertains and diverts.
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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Good Read, March 7, 2009
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This review is from: Head Games (Paperback)
HEAD GAMES is the end of life for Hector Lassiter and I was alive in 1945 and I remember 1957 and it was hard believe all this was going on. But I just heard on the radio about the drug fighting going on now 2009 in Mexico. Also heard about Yale University Skull & Bones collecting old Indian chief bones so the HEAD GAMES is not so hard to believe.

I also read his TOROS & TORSOS later book of a earlier version of Hector Lassiter with other horrible acts of man on man, or should I say woman on man.

The bottom line is that the research that had to be done to write this book is worth reading just to get an idea of what was happening at this time in history unknown to most of us.
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5 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A Head Is A Terrible Thing To Waste!, March 24, 2008
This review is from: Head Games (Paperback)
Craig McDonald's first book is a winner. It has a lot of things going for it: originality, great dialogue, a dark streak of humor, and probably most important of all a main character that is, in this day of dime a dozen protagonists who seem interchangeable, a breath of fresh air.

Hector Lassiter is many things: a one-time pulp writer, a novelist, a screenwriter, an adventurer, a lover of fine women, and a man who is willing to do what it takes to get the job done. In this case the job is to thwart the bad guys and return the long decapitated head of Mexican legend Pancho Villa to its true resting place.

You can read a detailed summation of the plot here already, so no need for me to go into that. But what I would like to impress on a curious reader who is thinking of giving this book a try is that Hector is not like many other crime novel protagonists. He's a man with flaws and a definite dark side. He does some things that will make you wonder about his moral compass, but definitely make him more human and believable. For those of you who are sick of so many of todays crime series heroes who never seem to age or change or develop this book is for you, because Hector ages, changes and develops right here in this one book.

I loved the book and wait with much anticipation for the prequel which is titled Toros & Torsos and is due out in late Summer/early Fall. I hope Mr. McDonald will treat us to many more of his imaginative works because he is simply a first rate writer.
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars An aquired taste, January 30, 2012
First, I have to express my Extreme gratitude toward Mr. McDonald for providing the first book in 8 that has actually been edited! Finally, an author who cares enough about his work to put forth the minimal extra effort necessary for his readers to enjoy the story without constantly stumbling over careless mistakes. I was able to lose myself in the world he created, an experience I cannot enjoy in 9 of 10 kindle books. Thank you!

The story, while not at all realistic (and not designed to be), is very entertaining and fast-paced, with plenty of dark humor and mystery to hold your attention. The main characters are the sort you can't help but love, even as you shake your head at their questionable values.

I greatly enjoyed the experience of immersing myself in the story. My only criticism is that, with so many surprises and twists and characters, there were a few times it just became overwhelming and a bit hard to follow.

Overall, even though this is not a genre I normally enjoy, I have to say this is the most well-written and satisfying read I've had in quite some time!
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars So that's what the maguey cactus is for, August 12, 2008
By 
Weston Ochse (Southern Arizona) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Head Games (Paperback)
This was a hit in my book. Reading Head Games was reminiscent of reading some of the great crime noir of the past, especially the author's namesake (sic), John D. MacDonald. Such a cool feeling to read this stuff again. And with the backdrop of 1957, the New Mexico-Mexico border, the set of A Touch of Evil and sex with black and white bombshells, this debut novel really left me satisfied, smiling and wanting more.

So if you don't know what Pancho Villa used the cactus for, read the book and you'll never look at a cactus the same way.
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5.0 out of 5 stars "The night air was like a tonsil-teasing soul kiss....", May 5, 2010
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This review is from: Head Games (Paperback)
I was first introduced to Craig McDonald's debut novel by an Irishman. His name is Ken Bruen and he is an excellent writer of noir thrillers (e.g., THE GUARDS). Bruen suggested reading HEAD GAMES in a Blog, so I took his suggestion seriously and found Craig McDonald's way with words to be terrific: "The night air was like a tonsil-teasing soul kiss - the rare scent of desert rain carried on the wind and heat lightning roaming the horizon." (p. 23) See what I mean?

I won't go into the plot of this humorous, action-packed, thriller cum-road book, as others have already written about it. The search for Mexican Bandit/Revolutionary Pancho Villa's severed head had been written about in another thriller, VILLA HEAD: A Chenney Hazzard Mystery, by author R. D. Brown, who dropped off the radarscreen in the 80s after completing this, his second novel (the first was entitled HAZZARD). McDonald's book, though, is faster paced and more interesting, especially since the reader learns a lot of that period in history that the author definitely researched in depth. In no way is it stuffy, though, unlike the history lessons we had to sit through back in high school. (Remember those "old Days" when history was actually taught in school?) Hector Lassiter, given the nickname "Lasso" by on-again/ off-again pal and drinking buddy Ernest Hemingway, (who pops up as a central character..alive and dead...in the next two novels, TOROS & TORSOS and PRINT THE LEGEND, along with movie stars: Rita Hayworth, Orson Welles, and Marlene 'The Kraut' Dietrich). Hec, is a rough and tumble author, and WW1 veteran, who is a lady's/man's man the reader will definitely take a liking to.

We first meet hard drinking Hector Lassiter in a Ciudad Juarez cantina, in 1957, sitting at a table trying to figure out how to get Pancho Villa's head out of Mexico and split the money some shady someones are willing to pay big bucks and also kill for. Hector describes himself and two compatriots on page 14, "But now the bandit's skull sat under our table between the feet of Eskin 'Bud' Fiske, aspiring, myopic poet and my latest would-be interviewer; Bill Wade, drunkard, soldier-of-fortune and con man; and me, Hector Lassiter, pulp-writer-turned-crime-writer, turned-lately-screenwriter." Shortly after the introduction, the bullets fly. And this is just the beginning!

It's an entertaining and exciting adventure. I recommend it highly (5 Stars)
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4.0 out of 5 stars Heads Up!, March 19, 2008
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This review is from: Head Games (Paperback)
Heads roll, get duffled around, and blown apart. Hard to believe this is McDonald's first novel. The absurd plot has some historical twists that kept me reading more. This book is out there...far out. Congratulations on having a wicked imagination, Craig!
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0 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars A fun read, March 9, 2008
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This review is from: Head Games (Paperback)
This is a fun read - especially if you have some down time by the beach! I enjoyed the antiquated writing style, and the fictional encounters with larger than life personas from the 50's. A unique tale that is fun to read, but not overly brainy.
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0 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars clever and funny, November 9, 2007
This review is from: Head Games (Paperback)
This was a fun book to read, full of real history and leaving you wanting more.
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Head Games
Head Games by Craig McDonald (Hardcover - Sept. 2007)
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