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Is Fat Bob Dead Yet?

A Novel

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
Stephen Dobyns—whom Stephen King has described as "the best of the best"—is back with a comic suspense novel about a small-time con operation, a pair of combative detectives, and the pride, revenge, and deception that guide us all. Richard Russo meets Elmore Leonard.
In the seaport town of New London, Connecticut, newcomer Connor Raposo has just witnessed a gruesome motorcycle accident on Bank Street. At least he thinks it was an accident. A man sliced in half by a reversing dump truck could only be an accident, right?
But these days, Connor can’t be sure of anything—his entire line of work is based on games of artful deception. His days at Bounty, Inc., are spent soliciting funds for improbable, bogus charities; its last venture was Free Beagles from Nicotine Addiction, Inc. The new scam is Prom Queens Anonymous, Inc., dedicated to helping former high school celebs transition to humdrum daily grown-up lives; Connor’s target is Angelina Rossi—Pumpkin Queen of 1985, proud beagle owner, and ex-wife of a man named Fat Bob.
Meanwhile, Manny Streeter and Benny Vikström are the local detectives assigned to the Bank Street motorcycle wreck, and despite their shared interest of proving each other wrong, the two eventually reach the same conclusion: This death by Harley was Murder One, pure and simple. As the detectives begin asking their questions around town, Connor is looking for similar answers that will determine whether he lives or dies. Among them: Who is Fat Bob, and is he actually dead?
Sharply written and entertainingly absurd, Is Fat Bob Dead Yet? is packed with Stephen Dobyns’s trademark characters—whimsical, neurotic, puzzling yet familiar, and impossible to pin down. Dobyns again proves why he is an American master of the suspenseful, all-too-human land of the absurd.
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    • Publisher's Weekly

      Starred review from July 27, 2015
      Gold Dagger Award–finalist Dobyns’s genius for dark comedy makes this intricate crime novel a triumph that will appeal to Elmore Leonard and Carl Hiaasen fans. An arch, omniscient narrative voice draws you in, setting the stage for a grim death in New London, Conn. A dump truck backs onto the street just as a motorcycle rider passes by, cutting him in half. The identity of the victim and whether the incident was an accident are initially mysteries. The tragedy allows gradual introductions of an eccentric but plausible cast of characters, starting with Connor Raposo, a visitor from San Diego, Calif., who witnesses the accident. Others include police partners who have an antagonistic relationship and a group of con artists who bilk the gullible by soliciting charitable donations for organizations such as the Holy Sisters of the Blessed Little Feet and Free Beagles from Nicotine Addiction. Dobyns (The Burn Palace) skillfully interweaves the various plot threads, such as the picaresque exploits of a homeless man named Fidget and threats to a resident suspected of being a federally protected witness. Frequent instances of wry humor and direct addresses to the reader are a plus. Agent: Phyllis Westberg, Harold Ober Associates.

    • Kirkus

      July 1, 2015
      Another darkly comic whodunit from veteran novelist Dobyns (The Burn Palace, 2013, etc.). First O.J., now Connor Raposo: Bruno Magli needs a better product-placement company. Connor is on his way to pick up a pair of the luxurious slip-ons from a New London cobbler's shop when he happens on a grisly sight: a motorcycle has collided with a dump truck, never a good thing. "The rider has been ripped in two so his bloody torso lies in the street, while under the truck at the end of a red smear, are the legs, one with a boot, one not." And then there's the head-or rather, there's not the head, which has gone missing. Yuck. Poor Fat Bob-for so poor Roberto Rossi is known. Except is it really Fat Bob, who owes the wrong people money and knows too much about the wrong things, who's the headless Harley horseman in question? Connor's got his hands full with that question. Two New London detectives are working on it as well, and given that two bodies can't occupy the same space, well....Dobyns writes with a nicely offhand goofiness: when a chopper mechanic asks the detectives whether Fat Bob is really dead, one replies, "I didn't check his pulse, but he was in two pieces." Yup. Adding to the grimly funny proceedings is Connor's back story, which finds an out-of-work schoolteacher mixed up in mischief to the point that "the line between legal and illegal wasn't so much crossed as crushed." Connor's a good guy, as are most of the folks we encounter in this good-natured, forgiving look at human foibles. As one of Connor's pals observes, all of us are just waiting for the flowerpot to come dropping down from the terrace above and take us out-and the bikers, detectives, sexpots, mobsters, and other assorted figures in the book are all, as Connor knows, "flowerpots waiting to happen." Fat Bob is, too. And where did that head go, anyway? A lively, laugh-out-loud winner.

      COPYRIGHT(2015) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

    • Library Journal

      August 1, 2015

      In New London, CT, Connor Raposo, a recent transplant to the small town, is picking up a pair of shoes from the cobbler when he hears a crash. Out in the street, a dump truck has backed over a rider on a Harley Davidson, and the scene is gruesome. Eccentric characters are brought together by this accident, including Sal Nicoletti, a mysterious man with Elvis hair whom Connor meets at the scene; Manny Streeter and Benny Vikstrom, local detectives who decide it was no accident but who would solve the crime faster if they weren't trying to drive each other crazy; Didi, Eartha, and Vaughan, Connor's associates in a money-making scheme raising funds for beagles addicted to cigarettes; and the not-dead-yet gambler Fat Bob, so-called for his love of the Harley model known as the Fat Bob. What begins as disparate threads ends up as a tangled web of double-crossing and deception, catching the hapless Connor in the middle. VERDICT The latest offering from veteran novelist and poet Dobyns (The Burn Palace) delights with quirky characters, absurd situations, language play, and keen insights. Recommended for those who enjoy dark humor and complicated plots in their mysteries. [See Prepub Alert, 3/30/15.]--Nancy H. Fontaine, Norwich P.L., VT

      Copyright 2015 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

    • Booklist

      Starred review from September 15, 2015
      Award-winning poet Dobyns also writes literary thrillers and the beloved Charlie Bradshaw comic mysteries. Here he melds the two in an uproariously entertaining comic thriller that evokes Elmore Leonard and Donald E. Westlake but adds several layers of absurdity and a narrative voice that suggests metafiction meets a Greek chorus meets Jane Austen. Now that's special! First the title: a Fat Bob is a kind of motorcycle, and in this tale, a portly gambler named Bob happens to own several of them. One of his enemies decides to kill Fat Bob (the guy not the bike) while he's riding his Fat Bob, but Fat Bob happens to loan that particular Fat Bob to another guy on the fateful day, resulting in the wrong guy getting killed. This mishap kick-starts a Marx Brotherslike comedy of errors in which reluctant scam artist Connorpassing by when Fat Bob's Fat Bob gets crushedfinds himself trapped, threatening the racket his gang of lovable wackos has devised: phone solicitations for such dubious causes as Free Beagles from Nicotine Addiction, Inc. So where does Jane Austen come in? In classic Dear Reader, fashion, Dobyns interrupts the goings-on for authorial commentary ( Surely the god of capriciousness and whimsy looks down from a cloud and rubs its paws ). Readers willing to loosen the reins of realism will be rubbing their paws, too, eagerly anticipating the next mention of Fat Bob's Fat Bob. Yes, it's absurd; yes, it's outrageous; but here's the thing: somehow, amid all the craziness, there's a beating heart, too.(Reprinted with permission of Booklist, copyright 2015, American Library Association.)

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