The Ragged End of Nowhere
by
Roy Chaney
Order:
USA
Can
Minotaur, 2009 (2009)
Hardcover
Reviewed by Tim Davis
W
hen
The Ragged End of Nowhere
opens, former CIA agent Bodo Hagen has returned from Germany to Las Vegas just in time to attend his murdered brother's graveside interment. Now, with virtually no clues to follow, Hagen is determined to take revenge on whoever killed his brother.
Q
uicker than you can say '
Dashiell Hammett's The Maltese Falcon,
' Hagen finds out that his brother (a tarnished veteran of the French Foreign Legion) had been trying to sell a valuable, mysterious artifact. As Hagen's brother learned too late, more than a few people are interested in laying claim to the apparently purloined dingus, and those people are more than willing to commit murder.
S
o, as he retraces his brother's final movements in southern Nevada, the body count in Las Vegas escalates, and the hardened Hagen encounters police officers with singular agenda, shady fences interested in fast money, paranoid casino owners eager to avenge the past, questionable antique dealers with dodgy motives, and plenty of bloodthirsty mercenaries.
B
efore the fast-paced narrative of
The Ragged End of Nowhere
explodes in its pulse-pounding conclusion, Hagen - if he can stay alive - stands (like the novel's readers) poised to make some remarkable discoveries. As winner of the prestigious
Tony Hillerman Prize
, Roy Chaney's gritty noir mystery is a superb debut novel. Enjoy!
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