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Infamous [Hardcover]

Ace Atkins (Author)
4.2 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (9 customer reviews)

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Book Description

April 15, 2010
From "one of the best crime writers at work today" (Michael Connelly) comes a fast,f unny, violent new noir crime classic-a Coen Brothers movie come to life.

He has been compared to Lehane, Ellroy, and Pelecanos, but Ace Atkins's rich, raucous, passionate blend of historical novel and crime story is all his own and never more so than in Infamous.

In July 1933, the gangster known as George "Machine Gun" Kelly staged the kidnapping-for-ransom of an Oklahoma oil­man. He would live to regret it. Kelly was never the sharpest knife in the drawer, and what started clean soon became messy, as two of his partners cut themselves into the action; a determined former Texas Ranger makes tracking Kelly his mission; and Kelly's wife, ever alert to her own self-interest, starts playing both ends against the middle.

The result is a mesmerizing tale set in the first days of the modern FBI, featuring one of the best femmes fatales in history-the Lady Macbeth of Depression-era crime-a great unexpected hero, and some of the most colorful supporting characters in recent crime fiction.

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Editorial Reviews

From Publishers Weekly

Set in 1933, Atkins's winning fourth history-based novel focuses on two figures who, as the author explains in an introduction, have been undeservedly lost in the shuffle of Depression-era gangsters: George Kelly, who ironically gets saddled with the nickname Machine Gun, and his wife, Kathryn. The fast-moving narrative spans a three-month period, starting with a fatal ambush in a parking lot outside Kansas City's Union Station in which hoods gun down several lawmen and the prisoner they were about to drive to Leavenworth. This massacre leads to the FBI obtaining the authority to make arrests and carry weapons. The bulk of the action concerns the Kellys' kidnapping of Charles Urschel, a wealthy Oklahoma oilman, and its aftermath. Atkins (Devil's Garden) brings to vivid life the henpecked George and the bloodthirsty Kathryn as he convincingly conjures up a past era. Not just for crime fans, this should appeal to a wide readership. (Apr.)
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

From Booklist

With the 1933 kidnapping of Oklahoma oil baron Charles Urschel, small-time bank robber George Kelly became “Machine Gun” Kelly. Atkins’ latest historical novel based on a real crime (following Devil’s Garden, 2009, about the Fatty Arbuckle scandal) makes it clear that Kelly’s wife, Kathryn, was the driving force behind his ascendance. George is shown to be an affable mug, a feckless dandy more interested in two-toned shoes and 16-cylinder Cadillacs than crime and machine guns, a crook who was dismissed as a lightweight by other gangsters. Kathryn, however, is a force of nature, a preening, determined-not-to-be-poor-again shopaholic, a celebrity-obsessed Lady Macbeth. But it’s Atkins’ prodigious research that makes this novel a compelling road trip through Depression-era America. He vividly portrays the Dust Bowl, foreclosures, the grinding poverty, gnawing hunger, desperation, and the rage at bankers (most of which resonate in today’s America); and he captures the imminent end of the gangsters’ heyday. Like many fine historical crime novels, Infamous offers a window on society, then and now. --Thomas Gaughan

Product Details

  • Hardcover: 416 pages
  • Publisher: Putnam Adult (April 15, 2010)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0399156305
  • ISBN-13: 978-0399156304
  • Product Dimensions: 9.3 x 6.3 x 1.3 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1.4 pounds (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 4.2 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (9 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #593,598 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

More About the Author

Ace Atkins is the author of nine novels, including The Ranger, the debut novel in the Quinn Colson series, from G.P. Putnam's Sons. Earlier this year, Atkins was chosen by the Robert B. Parker estate to continue the highly popular Spenser novels.

The first of those books hits bookstores in 2012 along with Atkins' sequel to The Ranger.

A former journalist who cut his teeth as a crime reporter in the newsroom of The Tampa Tribune, he published his first novel, Crossroad Blues, at 27 and became a full-time novelist at 30.

While at the Tribune, Ace earned a Pulitzer Prize nomination for a feature series based on his investigation into a forgotten murder of the 1950s. The story became the core of his critically acclaimed novel, White Shadow, which earned raves from noted authors and critics. In his next novels, Wicked City, Devil's Garden, and Infamous, blended first-hand interviews and original research into police and court records with tightly woven plots and incisive characters. The historical novels told great American stories by weaving fact and fiction into a colorful, seamless tapestry.

The Ranger represents a return to Ace's first love: hero-driven series fiction. Quinn Colson is a real hero--a veteran of Iraq and Afghanistan--who returns home to north Mississippi to fight corruption on his home turf. The first Quinn Colson novel, a contemporary book with a dash of classic westerns and noir, hits stores June 9th.

Ace lives on a historic farm outside Oxford, Mississippi with his family.

 

Customer Reviews

9 Reviews
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Average Customer Review
4.2 out of 5 stars (9 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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8 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars A worthy reading experience,, April 28, 2010
This review is from: Infamous (Hardcover)
Infamous is my first Ace Atkins novel and I must report that Atkins is a breath of fresh air. Infamous is a tightly woven story based on a real incident and involving real perps and victims. He is another of a growing list of authors that fictionalize historical events to produce marvelous fiction.

Its 1933 and oil magnate Charles Urschel is kidnapped and held for ransom by George Kelly and his wife Kathryn. Background material for Atkins is not hard to find. He relied on an array of period documents, details supplied by family members, and abundant newspaper articles. All Atkins had to do was to put the story together which he does admirably.

In total the adventure lasted an astounding 56 days and resulted in the capture of the now infamous Machine Gun Kelly. What is interesting is that Kelly isn't exactly the hardnosed, heavy trigger finger villain that we've come to believe. In fact, Atkins makes it pretty clear that Kelly's wife Kathryn was the real hard case in the family. It seems likely that without Kathryn's influence Kelly would have been anything but famous or infamous. Kelly was more interested in the clothes he wore or the cars he drove than in making a name for him self. Kathryn was as likely to deal her husband a curve ball to save her own skin as not.

Infamous is Atkins first novel following his last effort Devils Garden. I always comment on characters but characterization is less of an issue with Infamous because Atkins is writing about people who actually lived and breathed. However, I need to say that he does a great job in making both Kelly and Kathryn three dimensional. They seem to spring off the page and take on the robust warmth that is reflective of good authorship. Atkins does such a good job reporting the story that even the supposed good guys are full of character blemishes when examined under magnification.

Infamous is a terrific read and though the story's climax really isn't much of a climax, its still worth your while to read. If you're at all curious, Infamous will spur you to investigate the story on the Internet.

Peace to all.
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4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars High Quality, June 4, 2010
By 
Bookreporter (New York, New York) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Infamous (Hardcover)
My 12-year-old daughter came home from school recently with the news that historical fiction is now defined as any book that is set prior to the Vietnam War. This bothers me, primarily because I remember the Vietnam War. For me, history (at least at this point in time) is what happened before, or at least shortly after, I was born. By either standard, however, Ace Atkins has been writing wonderful, addicting and unforgettable historical crime fiction for the past few years. His latest novel, INFAMOUS, is about Machine Gun Kelly, a Depression-era outlaw who became a household name both in spite of and because of his own ineptness.

My knowledge of Kelly prior to reading Atkins's fictionalized account of him in INFAMOUS was from a low-budget 1958 film directed by Roger Corman and starring Charles Bronson. One of James Taylor's best and most underappreciated songs was titled after and about Kelly, who was one of the first of the FBI's notorious Public Enemies. Yet, as Atkins demonstrates, Kelly's ineptness in both his professional and personal life was almost comedic.

Professionally, Kelly (born George Barnes) and his partner in crime had a knack for successfully robbing small banks for little payoff. It was Kelly's one chance at the "big time" --- the kidnapping of Oklahoma oilman Charlie Urschel --- that captured the public's imagination and led to Kelly's downfall. As far as his personal life was concerned, Kelly's wife, Kathryn, was a fireball of a woman who cuckolded him every chance she had, hedging her bets and often playing her husband off against law enforcement so that she could move in whichever way the wind was blowing.

The man in charge of the kidnapping investigation --- and the pursuit of Kelly --- was FBI Special Agent Gus T. Jones, a former Texas ranger and an "old school" law enforcement officer who looked in quiet bemusement at the younger agents with whom he was frequently called upon to serve. The story of Jones's pursuit of Kelly, taking place over the course of just a little less than two months, is chronicled with an over-the-shoulder narrative concerning all of the parties involved. Atkins, as he has been with his three previous historical works, is nothing less than phenomenal. Comparisons with Elmore Leonard and James Ellroy are understandable and inevitable, but Atkins is a talent apart but equal of those two grandmasters.

In the course of his research for INFAMOUS, Atkins drove the roads, rode the rails, and visited the hotels that Kelly and the pursuing Jones traveled and utilized during the course of their cat-and-mouse romp through the west, and his prose is informed by the dirt and dust that he picked up along the way. I have said this before, but it bears repeating: Atkins is one of those very few authors whose prose is so riveting that the reality of it supplants the world around the reader's own.

This is especially true of INFAMOUS; set within the first third of the 20th century, it makes our modern conveniences --- cell phones, cable television, mp3 players, and yes, computers --- seem like anachronisms. It is not only Atkins's penchant for historical accuracy that makes the book such a joy to read. He is also a master storyteller, switching scenes during the course of the narrative to build suspense, which reaches a hair-raising pitch even though one knows what ultimately occurs. The best element, however, is Atkins's ability to turn a sharp phrase. The man is, quite simply, one of our best contemporary writers. If you underline your favorite passages while reading, you will find at least one per page here.

INFAMOUS is a book of such quality that readers unfamiliar with the author will add his name to their must-read list. If you've read him before, he's already on your list and will stay there --- carved in stone --- after you read his latest.
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars Lost my interest, June 24, 2010
By 
A. Martin (birmingham, al, usa) - See all my reviews
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This review is from: Infamous (Hardcover)
I have read virtually everything the author has written. The last two books have represented in my opinion a falling off of the quality of the books. I lost interest in this book and stopped reading after the first 100 or so pages. I just couldn't bring myself to care about the characters and could not focus my attention enough to follow the historical context and the plot.
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