![]() ![]() ![]() Let's hope Phillips spares us from waiting another decade for this book." - The St. You can't help thinking that there's a third novel looming, this one set in that city by the bay. It is a joy to read Phillips." - Huffington Post "Phillips's juicy vernacular is perfect for Bill's louche narrative voice, and his easy, flowing style suits the loose morality and freewheeling spirit of a hotheaded young nation." - New York Times Book Review "Phillips has a nice touch in using nasty characters as first-person narrators. He chooses just the right details and the right amount of details so as not to clutter his sentences which flow tripingly on your tongue. Phillips description is lurid, colorful and powerful. The ladies drop their drawers or veils in an instant in his presence and this is great fun to read. His writing is frank, vivid and hot, but the man is rarely the aggressor. Praise for Hop Alley : "Phillips has a way of writing a bon vivant of the Wild West with testosterone raging without it appearing macho or obnoxious or ego centric. Hop Alley proves that no one does the Wild West like noir master Scott Phillips. And when the body count starts rising, Bill will soon start wishing he had never left Cottonwood at all. Bill's peaceful time away from Cottonwood turns anything but as he must confront the mysterious murder of his housekeeper's brother-in-law, the increasing instability of Priscilla as both men try to ease out of her clutches, and an all out-riot across Hop Alley. Left by Maggie, Bill enjoys an erotic affair with Priscilla, a fallen singer addicted to laudanum, who is also seeing his friend Ralph Banbury, the editor of the local Denver Bulletin (neither man minds sharing). But what happened to him in those missing years? What happened to Maggie, to Bill, and their escape from the murderous Bender family? Hop Alley answers all those questions as we return to the Wild West and discover Bill Ogden, now living as Bill Sadlaw, running a photo studio near the Chinese part of town know as Hop Alley in the frontier town of Denver in 1878. Bill then turned up alone in San Francisco in 1890, having to face a past from which he could not run. But problems followed the money and soon Bill was confronting both the wicked family of serial killers known as the Bloody Benders as well as his one-time friend Marc, having fallen into an affair with his beautiful wife Maggie. Saloon owner and photographer Bill Ogden thought it could be more and allied with wealthy developer Marc Leval to capitalize on the advent of the railroad and the cattle trail that soon turned Cottonwood into a wild boomtown. That novel featured the Kansas town beginning in 1872 when it was just a small community of run down farms, dusty roads, and two-bit crooks. Cottonwood (2004) was a huge step forward for the burgeoning king of noir Scott Phillips, and his dark and gritty take on the western earned him starred reviews and praise from crime masters Michael Connelly and George Pelecanos. ![]()
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