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3.0 

That's How I Roll

By Andrew Vachss
That's How I Roll by Andrew Vachss digital book - Fable

Publisher Description

Andrew Vachss, the master of hard-boiled fiction, returns with a deeply revealing new novel about an assassin whose love forced him to kill his own conscience.

Esau Till’s race is almost run. After pleading guilty to a series of homicides, he sits on death row, awaiting lethal injection. And writing his life story. But his memoir is no case study in tragedy—it’s his one last chance to protect his brother, Tory, after he’s gone. And, as too many have learned, when it comes to protecting his baby brother, Esau Till is a man without boundaries.

Esau’s father was a widely feared beast who, it was commonly believed, killed his wife and used his own daughter as a substitute. In Esau’s own words, when your sister is your mother, too, you know you’re not going to come out right. Not you, not your life, not nothing.

When the genetic cards were dealt, Esau drew a genius IQ but a horribly crippled body. His brother Tory drew a “slow” mind but almost superhuman strength. Very early on, Esau learned that the only way to guarantee his baby brother’s safety was to make himself indispensable to certain people. A self-taught explosives expert, he became the top assassin for two rival local mobs. When a third mob attempted to recruit his brother, Esau took them all out, unaware that one of them was an under-cover FBI agent.

Execution looms, but no prison can hold Esau’s mind. Or his love. As the State prepares to take his life, Esau plots going all-in on the last and most deadly hand he will ever play.

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10 Reviews

3.0
“A Vachss novel through and though with all his hallmarks. Child abuse builds our monsters and the silence of society that wrings it's hands and cries" "but think of the children!" when it's politically expedient. Found family is the key to survival for survivors, even those ones who become monsters themselves. Layers of facts in the fiction, teaching you a little bit here and there, educating as Vachss set out to do. Slow moving start (and this time I think his pacing was a touch off) building up until suddenly you're in the middle of criminal tribes, the families they form, and the bonds they share. Once you're in the thick of it, suddenly it's a sharp drop, the drop is sharp and you're speeding to the end. Esau Till is not nearly so relatable as Burke. Life has made him meaner than the titular Burke series lead, and frankly that takes some doing. But he's got both a mind and a relentless nature you have to respect. Tory-boy is both his Savior and his stone, both giving him heart and dragging him down to the depraved things he'd do to help keep his brother safe and secure long after Esau's death, which will come from the spina bifuda he suffers from or from the cost of his work. The plan is long and fraught with difficulty, but Esau is no stranger to hardship. He makes it work, finding it how things work from the local library, the internet, or the extension of the family he builds. Esau is capable of kindness though, and love - and that's why he's damned to meet a terrible end. Working our way though the story of how things got off the rails starts as a slow climb and during the first 30 pages I struggled to give a shit about Esau. But once we got to where we actually see him taking care of Tory-boy instead of just hearing him talk about the plan itself we finally hit paydirt. From there it's a tense thriller, watching Esau navigate back country crime and working too keep his brother safe while he does it. Fans of Vachss will definitely want to read That's How I Roll. Readers new to Vachss may want a stronger jumping on point for his work, but this isn't a bad book but any stretch. Just needs to get up to steam to really start rolling, that's all.”
““There isn’t a liquor store in the world that lets you buy on credit. So, if a man walks into a liquor store after dark, it’s either because he’s got money … or because he doesn’t.” Who doesn't want to read a story about a hitman in a wheelchair? This was a good story and the first that I've read from Vachss. I would definitely read another one, in fact I have a couple on my to-read list already from the library. If you're looking for a fast, easy read with some excitement and an easy to follow plot then this is a great book for you to jump into.”

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