The Last Tomorrow
Description
A gripping thriller from the acclaimed author of Good Neighbors, perfect for fans of Linwood Barclay and Robert Crais
Los Angeles, 1952. After 13-year-old Sandy Duncan shoots his stepfather and carves a symbol from a comic book into the corpse’s forehead, district attorney Seymour Markley launches a grand jury investigation into the murder, one that could implicate east-coast crime boss James Manning. Also in the frame is the comic book’s creator, Eugene Dahl. When threatening notes appear nailed to his front door, he is lured to a downtown hotel where one of the men who could bring down James Manning is being held. There, Eugene finds the witness murdered, as well as the police officer charged with protecting him, and all fingers point to Eugene. Forced to go on the run, Eugene devises a plan that involves deeds far worse than any of which he’s been accused.
Praise for The Last Tomorrow
"Compelling, slick, exuberant, flashy, funny, fierce, and cinematic. . . . Deftly written with panache and polish. . . . This remarkable novel, a lean, psychologically unsettling noir tale, will stay with you long after you put it down and regretfully say, 'I wish I wrote that.'" —Library Journal, starred review of Good Neighbors
"A well-written, fast-paced book . . . along the order of Quentin Tarantino and with a long and bloody trail to the end." —Charlaine Harris, bestselling author of the Sookie Stackhouse series, on The Dispatcher
"Violent, vivid, and disturbing, The Dispatcher is a stomach churner. If you want a book that grabs you—almost chokes you—and won't let go, this is it. But it should come with a warning label: Caution, a serious writer at work." —Ridley Pearson, New York Times-bestselling author