A Hard Ticket Home

by David Housewright

Rushmore McKenzie (1)

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Ex-St. Paul cop Rushmore McKenzie has more time, and more money, than he knows what to do with. In fact, when he's willing to admit it to himself (and he usually isn't), Mac is downright bored. Until he decides to do a favor for a friend facing a family tragedy: Nine-year-old Stacy Carlson has been diagnosed with leukemia, and the only one with the matching bone marrow that can save her is her older sister, Jamie. Trouble is, Jamie ran away from home years ago. Mac begins combing the show more backstreets of the Twin Cities, tracking down Jamie's last known associates. He starts with the expected pimps and drug dealers, but the path leads surprisingly to some of the Cities' most respected businessmen, as well as a few characters far more unsavory than the street hustlers he anticipated. As bullets fly and bodies drop, Mac persists, only to find that what he's looking for, and why, are not exactly what he'd imagined. David Housewright's uncanny ability to turn the Twin Cities into an exotic, brooding backdrop for noir fiction, and his winning, witty hero Rushmore McKenzie, serve as a wicked one-two punch in A Hard Ticket Home, a series debut that reinforces Housewright's well-earned reputation as one of crime fiction's rising stars. show less

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5 reviews
I was reluctant to use the road. What if Thomas Teachwell was watching it, what if he saw me coming? I wasn't overly concerned he might shoot me. According to my information it was unlikely that Teachwell even had a gun, much less knew how to use it although a man on the run is capable of anything. Nor was I anxious that he might escape. What did I care? But if Teachwell escaped with the money...That, after all, was why I had chased him 278 miles north from the Twin Cities on the coldest day in the past two decades. For the money.
After almost a dozen years on the St. Paul Police force, Rushmore McKenzie knows he has no chance of promotion ever since he made a righteous killing using a gun that was not standard police issue. When he finds an embezzler and the money he stole, he quits the force. This makes him eligible to take the insurance company reward for the return of the money. He is now a wealthy unlicensed private eye taking cases that interest him.
Richard and Molly Carlson ask him to find their daughter Jamie who left years ago and never returned. Their younger daughter Stacy is dying of leukemia and her only hope is a bone marrow transplant. After a thorough search he locates Jamie who tells him she will get in touch with him after she tells her husband show more about the family he never knew she had. When he doesn't hear from her, he goes to her home only to find her murdered. Her husband and son are missing, but Jamie's parents want him to locate their grandson who might be a match for Stacy. The investigation turns deadlier when eight men connected to the case are murdered, some by McKenzie's hand.

McKenzie is smart, determined and ready to give his all to right wrongs and pursue justice. There's always room for one more true blue American hero!
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Faced with the possibility of having to turn in an embezzler and come away with nothing or leave the police department and collect a huge finders fee from the insurance company, St. Paul detective Rushmore MacKenzie chooses the latter. Now he works similar to Lawrence Block’s Scudder: he has no license but does things to help people. In this story he’s been hired to find the sister of a girl who needs a transplant. Jamie Carlson had left home at 18 (never satisfactorily explained) never to return, after graduating high school, and now they need to see if she’s a match for her younger sister, Stacy who needs a bone marrow transplant.

MacKenzie finds the sister quickly enough. She’s married, with a child, TC, to a used car show more salesman in St. Paul who is involved with a rather shadowy group of elite businessmen who all made their money selling at a discount. He tells her of the need to be tested for the transplant, and she agrees to go home but is viciously murdered before she can. Mac’s oldest friend is a homicide detective on the St. Paul police force and he’s working on a case that’s soon linked to Jamie’s death, not to mention the involvement of the ATF and FBI.

As with any first book in a series, there are some loose ends and the occasional requirement to suspend credulity (what Mac does with a concussion at the end of the book defies belief despite its explanation). Nevertheless, a good read.

I discovered Housewright after reading Penance, one of the Holland Taylor series. This new series, featuring Rushmore MacKenzie shows promise, and I’ve already started onTin City, second in the series.
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I like Rushmore McKenzie and his cast of friends. This is the first book in the McKenzie series and my attempt to get back in order after having read The Taking of Libbie South Dakota because of the title.

This book introduces McKenzie and builds the background I was missing in Libbie. Still, there was a bit more violence and death in this book than I usually want to deal with. However, it was not too over the top and I was able to enjoy the story and the mystery. I didn't have a clue what was going on -- this one twists and turns like a rattlesnake!

I'll be reading more in the series, I like spending time with the wise-cracking McKenzie and the mysteries are very well done.
Excellent mystery series set in Minneapolis/St. Paul. Reminds me of Travis McGee and Myron Bolitar, with a hint of Nebraska (great series by William J. Reynolds).

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35+ Works 1,667 Members
Former newspaper reporter David Housewright left his job to pursue a full-time career in detective fiction writing. Housewright then introduced Holland Taylor, his recurrent main character in his books Penance and Practice to Deceive. He won an Edgar Award for Best First Novel and a Shamus Award for Best P. I. Novel for his writing in Penance. show more (Bowker Author Biography) show less

Series

Common Knowledge

Canonical title
A Hard Ticket Home
Original publication date
2006
People/Characters
Rushmore McKenzie; Kirsten Whitson; Merci Cole; Bobby Dunston; Shelby Dunston; Lila Casselman (show all 8); Warren Casselman; Nina Truhler
Important places
St. Paul, Minnesota, USA; Minneapolis, Minnesota, USA; Grand Rapids, Minnesota
Dedication
For Renée,
as always.
First words
It took a few moments before I could force myself to leave the car.
Last words
(Click to show. Warning: May contain spoilers.)"Whaddaya say, Sammy," I said to the TV screen. "Just me and you, man. Just me and you."
Blurbers
Barr, Nevada; Krueger, William Kent

Classifications

Genres
Fiction and Literature, Mystery
DDC/MDS
813.54Literature & rhetoricAmerican literature in EnglishAmerican fiction in English1900-19991945-1999
LCC
PS3558 .O8668 .H37Language and LiteratureAmerican literatureAmerican literatureIndividual authors1961-
BISAC

Statistics

Members
154
Popularity
211,708
Reviews
5
Rating
(3.80)
Languages
English
Media
Paper, Audiobook, Ebook
ISBNs
7
ASINs
3