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THE KILLING OF THE TINKERS by KEN BRUEN
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SummaryWhen Jack Taylor blew town at the end of The Guards his
alcoholism was a distant memory and sober dreams of a new
life in London were shining in his eyes. In the opening
pages of The Killing of the Tinkers, Jack's back in Galway
a year later with a new leather jacket on his back, a pack
of smokes in his pocket, a few grams of coke in his
waistband, and a pint of Guinness on his mind. So much for
new beginnings. Before long he's sunk into his old patterns, lifting his
head from the bar only every few days, appraising his
surroundings for mere minutes and then descending deep into
the alcoholic, drug-induced fugue he prefers to the real
world. But a big gypsy walks into the bar one day during a
moment of Jack's clarity and changes all that with a simple
request. Jack knows the look in this man's eyes, a look of
hopelessness mixed with resolve topped off with a quietly
simmering rage; he's seen it in the mirror. Recognizing a
kindred soul, Jack agrees to help him, knowing but not
admitting that getting involved is going to lead to more
bad than good. But in Jack Taylor's world bad and good are
part and parcel of the same lost cause, and besides, no one
ever accused Jack of having good sense. Ken Bruen wowed critics and readers alike when he
introduced Jack Taylor in The Guards; he'll blow them away
with The Killing of the Tinkers, a novel of gritty
brilliance that cements Bruen's place among the greats of
modern crime fiction.
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