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So I'm a Heel / Flint / The Big Out: 3 Steps to Hell
Contributor(s): Hano, Arnold (Author), Phillips, Gary (Introduction by)
ISBN: 1933586508     ISBN-13: 9781933586502
Publisher: Stark House Press
OUR PRICE:   $21.56  
Product Type: Paperback
Published: May 2016
Qty:
Additional Information
BISAC Categories:
- Fiction | Mystery & Detective - General
- Fiction | Mystery & Detective - Hard-boiled
- Fiction | Westerns - General
Physical Information: 0.78" H x 5.5" W x 8.5" (0.97 lbs) 380 pages
Themes:
- Cultural Region - Western U.S.
- Topical - Country/Cowboy
 
Descriptions, Reviews, Etc.
Publisher Description:

So I'm a Heel

It's just a lucky break the way Ed Hawkins gets a look at that police blotter that tips him off on the arrest-and-release of his rich neighbor, Otto Weylin, for molesting a minor. Nobody ever gave Hawkins a break, and he doesn't intend to give Weylin a break either. He figures that Weylin is good for ten grand to keep this little bit of information out of the papers, and maybe he's right. But why all of a sudden is his 10-year-old son becoming so friendly with Weylin? What is the secret that Weylin's sex-starved wife keeps hinting at? The blackmail scheme is rapidly backfiring and Hawkins can't trust anyone, even his own wife--and now his own boy has gone missing

Flint

Flint took a bullet in the lung during that last job, a hole that just won't seem to plug itself. But hired killers don't get to retire, and Flint is called out to Colorado for one more job. A rancher named Mr. Good wants his competition removed, and he's got a pretty plan how to get away with it. So Flint rides out and meets the local sheriff, a man so fat he spends all his time in his office--should be easy to work around. He meets his victim, Thomason, a poor but honest man, who naively hires him on the spot. And then he meets Thomason's wife, Cora, who seems....very friendly--but is she all that she seems? And can Mr. Good really be trusted? This is supposed to be Flint's last job, but it's funny how a simple plan can soon get so complicated.

The Big Out

Brick Palmer, catcher for the Blues, gets a call after the game. His kid brother Johnny is in trouble again. Johnny is the brilliant one, the one who's going to be a doctor, but he's forged Brick's name on a $10,000 Syndicate debt. So Brick does what he has to do, he pays off the Syndicate punk, then busts his nose. Randy York of the Herald sees the payoff and reveals the meeting in his column the next day. Unable to rat out his brother, Brick is thrown out of the league. All he can do is play for one of the outlaw leagues. So he and wife Cathy move to Montreal and try to start over. But they're all out to get him--the fans and players for selling out, the Umps for dirtying the game. They're all out for blood. But for the Syndicate punk it's personal--he plans to make it murder.