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Road Dogs: A Novel by Elmore Leonard
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Road Dogs: A Novel (original 2009; edition 2009)

by Elmore Leonard

Series: Jack Foley (2), Cundo Rey (2)

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7294030,974 (3.43)33
Gentleman/banker-robber Jack Foley is back in prison doing a thirty-year sentence after a week-long escape. Brought in by Karen Sisco, US marshall, who got her man after being abducted with the escapees, Jack and Karen have a thing for each other, and Karen arrests him only after a meaningful 'time'out' together. Jack is resigning himself to doing time, lots of it, and he seems to have a friendly and easy control over the hardened criminals he is imprisoned with. This easiness is enhanced in the minds of others by his fame as a bank robber. It is this ease which impresses Cuando Rey, a Cuban refugee and criminal who is doing time for murder. Cuando arranges to have Foley's sentence hugely reduced, but has favors aplenty to ask when they're both released. Cuando's wife, Dawn, is pretending to be saintly all the while (whilst quite the opposite) under the negligent eye of The Monk, a gay accountant similarly in thrall to Cuando. Foley is freed, and, as he fears, Cuando wants to use him on a job, just as his every move is being scrutinised by FBI detective Lou Adams. In an instant, though, Dawn has seduced him, and she has an agenda all of her own.… (more)
Member:VMI
Title:Road Dogs: A Novel
Authors:Elmore Leonard
Info:William Morrow (2009), Edition: 1, Hardcover, 272 pages
Collections:Your library
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Road Dogs by Elmore Leonard (2009)

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» See also 33 mentions

English (38)  Spanish (1)  German (1)  All languages (40)
Showing 1-5 of 38 (next | show all)
I read loads of Elmore Leonard's books in my teens and twenties but hadn't picked one up for a while. This was a very enjoyable reminder of why he's as respected as he is - great characters, crackling dialogue and prose as lean and readable as anyone could wish for. ( )
  whatmeworry | Apr 9, 2022 |
Never mess with the Cuban, but, never mess with the Cuban's woman, but then again, never mess with Jack.

Listened to it straight through in one day. What a laugh.

Elmore Leonard is a craftsman sorely missed. ( )
  nab6215 | Jan 18, 2022 |
this book was a mess. definitely couldn’t picture clooney as foley again. ( )
  austinburns | Dec 16, 2021 |
I don't know how this one slipped under my radar. I stumbled across it in a secondhand bookstore. A hardcover Elmore for $4? I'm in.

And judging from the cover, I figured it for one of his older books, because I just bought it. I didn't even read what it's about. When it's Elmore Leonard, I don't screw around. He wrote it, I'm going to like it (well, except for his kid's book, A Coyote In The House.

Anyway, when I saw he'd actually written this book in 2009, and tied together the three main characters from Out of Sight, La Brava. and Riding The Rap...well damn. Like Lennon said, A splendid time is guaranteed for all.

This one's short, with the typical Leonard plot of everyone out to pretty much screw everyone else (literally and figuratively) that he does so damn well and never gets old. But it's full of his amazing characters, fantastic observances and that fantastic dialogue that nobody else can hold a candle to.

Damn, I miss Elmore Leonard. ( )
  TobinElliott | Sep 3, 2021 |
While the writing is great (of course, it's Elmore Leonard), this book seemed to be lighter on dialogue and longer on exposition. Since Leonard is a master of dialogue, I didn't quite enjoy this book as much as some of his other works. (I think I've read all of his books, except for his Westerns). ( )
  bjkelley | Dec 5, 2020 |
Showing 1-5 of 38 (next | show all)
To call the narrative itself cinematic is a cliché. It’s partly true, but this writer doesn’t foolishly compete with cinema where cinema has the edge: his scenes of sex and violence are clever and brief, rapidly established to let the verbal engine of dialogue drive the story forward.
 

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Author nameRoleType of authorWork?Status
Elmore Leonardprimary authorall editionscalculated
James, Peter FrancisNarratorsecondary authorsome editionsconfirmed

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They put Foley and the Cuban together in the backseat of the van and took them from the Palm Beach County jail on Gun Club to Glades Correctional, the old redbrick prison at the south end of Lake Okeechobee.
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(Click to show. Warning: May contain spoilers.)
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Gentleman/banker-robber Jack Foley is back in prison doing a thirty-year sentence after a week-long escape. Brought in by Karen Sisco, US marshall, who got her man after being abducted with the escapees, Jack and Karen have a thing for each other, and Karen arrests him only after a meaningful 'time'out' together. Jack is resigning himself to doing time, lots of it, and he seems to have a friendly and easy control over the hardened criminals he is imprisoned with. This easiness is enhanced in the minds of others by his fame as a bank robber. It is this ease which impresses Cuando Rey, a Cuban refugee and criminal who is doing time for murder. Cuando arranges to have Foley's sentence hugely reduced, but has favors aplenty to ask when they're both released. Cuando's wife, Dawn, is pretending to be saintly all the while (whilst quite the opposite) under the negligent eye of The Monk, a gay accountant similarly in thrall to Cuando. Foley is freed, and, as he fears, Cuando wants to use him on a job, just as his every move is being scrutinised by FBI detective Lou Adams. In an instant, though, Dawn has seduced him, and she has an agenda all of her own.

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