From Publishers Weekly
Scott Brick brings the perfect tone to Epperson's noir tale of mobsters, molls and murder in 1930s Los Angeles. Two Gun Danny Layton is literally a man without a past: an amnesic and reluctant gangster, he can't figure out how he came to work for psychotic crime boss Bud The Kind One Seitz—or how he fell in love with Bud's girl, Darla. Brick brings a subdued sense of melancholy to his portrayal of Layton, capturing the amnesiac's conflict between what he thinks he knows and what he feels. Weaving world-weariness into each character's voice, he brilliantly recreates the shadowy glamour of Depression-era Los Angeles.
A Five Star hardcover(Reviews, Oct. 1).
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Review
On every page, the language is crisp and fresh, the details sharp and keenly observed, the dialogue real, never forced....The novel itself is of the highest caliber in its genre and makes the leap into literature, as do the best works in all genres. -- Los Angeles Times Hard-biting noir....Epperson presents Landon's inner turmoil plausibly and manages to throw in an occasional turn of phrase that Raymond Chandler might have penned.... it's an impressive debut and deserves to be followed by more. -- Publishers Weekly --.
Tom Epperson's Depression-era Los Angeles is spot-on....With gangsters on the chase we race down the Sunset Strip, as bullets are flying and blondes are crying. Epperson knows how to write with philosophic compassion and kick-ass action. What a great read! --Steve Hodell, bestselling author of Black Dahlia Avenger: A Genius for Murder
Tense, emotional, and unforgiving, Tom Epperson's The Kind One is a beautifully written take on the dark Hollywood of the '30s--a perfect noir novel that is pure and original, with a heavy heart that beats through each page. --Robert Crais, New York Times bestselling author.