Thomas Perry is the bestselling author of over twenty novels, including the critically acclaimed Jane Whitefield series and The Butcher s Boy, which won the Edgar Award. He lives in Southern California.
<b>Praise for <i>Forty Thieves</i> </b> Guns are ubiquitous in Thomas Perry s breathtaking <i>Forty Thieves</i>, a double-barreled Southern California thriller that moves almost faster than a speeding bullet. <b>Tom Dolan, <i>Wall Street Journal</i></b> Nick and Nora Charles they re not. But while Sid and Veronica Abel may be lacking in urbanity, these private investigators are no less brainy and far better marksmen. Appearing for the first time in Thomas Perry s new thriller, <i>Forty Thieves</i>, these former Los Angeles police detectives have been married for over 30 years and have children and grandchildren. That confers on them the wisdom of the ancients, along with the cloak of invisibility in a youth-obsessed society, which suits them just fine . . . The tips you learn in a Perry novel are priceless. <b>Marilyn Stasio, <i>New York Times Book Review</i></b> This stand-alone caper smoothly mixes high-octane thrills with comic capering, as two married couplesone a PI team, the other a hit couple for hirespar with one another . . . until they both find themselves in the crosshairs of a lethal gang of Russian jewel thieves. Along the way to a knockout finale . . . Perry offers a master class in narrative sleight of hand . . . . Like the work of the late, great Ross Thomasthe crime writer Perry most resemblesPerry s books, whether series or stand-alone, absolutely resist easy categorization, thoroughly melding character and plot, light and dark, and totally immersing the reader in the irresistible narrative. <b><i>Booklist</i> (starred review)</b> <i>Forty Thieves</i> is Thomas Perry at his bestequal parts exciting, ingenious and entertaining. <b><i>Deadly Pleasures</i></b> Sardonic humor is rare in American mysteries. It is the kind of humor that creeps up on you and suddenly your reaction is a wry smile as you read the double-edged melodrama which abounds in Thomas Perry s work. <b><i>Washington Times</i></b> Propulsive, darkly humorous . . . As the likable, series-worthy Abels struggle to survive at least long enough to solve [the] murder, Perry tosses in several hairpin plot twists that culminate in a satisfyingly surprising conclusion. <b><i>Publishers Weekly</i></b> Sid and Ronnie, both formerly of the LAPD, are brainy, thorough, and resourceful . . . The would-be killers, Ed and Nicole Hoyt, are the kind of people Perry knows like the back of his hand: coldhearted, businesslike, and consummately successful . . . Entertaining and suspenseful. <b><i>Kirkus Reviews</i></b> A really solid suspense novel. One that gives you plenty of action, intriguing characters, but most of all, some real chills down the spine . . . You ll read this until the wee hours. <b><i>Globe and Mail</i> (Toronto)</b> Forty Thieves . . . is high-voltage Perry . . . In Perry s world you ll find no faces from Central Casting, and you ll hear no dialogue that rings flat or familiar. He brings his superb thriller to a close with a confrontation between his two foes that is as astonishing as it is satisfying. <b><i>Open Letters Monthly</i></b>