G-Man (Bob Lee Swagger Book 10)
G-Man (Bob Lee Swagger Book 10) book cover

G-Man (Bob Lee Swagger Book 10)

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$9.99
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G.P. Putnam's Sons
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Praise for G-Man “First-rate...Depression-era outlaws come shooting back to life in Stephen Hunter’s latest thriller....[His] double-barreled finish…should satisfy everyone.”—Gerald Bartell, Thexa0Washington Post “A first-rate tale that spans decades and generations....The pages fly by once the introductions are made and the characters are in place. Those who grew up watching The Untouchables or the plethora of gangster films that were made in the early and mid-20th century will find much to love here, not the least of which is the author's penchant for historical accuracy and firearms lore. This combination makes G-Man one of Hunter’s best works to date, which is certainly a major feat.”—Joe Hartlaub, BookReporter.com“A roaring good read...Bob Lee Swagger is a Middle America Dirty Harry...As the tenth Bob Lee Swagger novel, G-Man is Stephen Hunter’s Lonesome Dove , a big sort of book that takes well-established characters, especially Bob Lee himself, and puts them on an action-packed mission of self-discovery....Riveting....Hunter masterfully pulls the thread that unravels this action-packedxa0story—it'sxa0hard to stop reading.”—Frank Miniter, FORBES.com“Hunter’sxa0outstandingxa010th Bob Lee Swagger novel (after 2014’s Sniper’s Honor ) takes readers back to the gangster days of the 1930s...Hunter’s skilled ear for dialogue and idiom has never been better,xa0and some of the action scenes—especially a chapter describing the famous robbery of the Merchants National Bank in South Bend, Ind., on June 30, 1934—are as elegant as they are disturbing.”— Publishers Weekly (starred review)“Hunter fits the parts as snugly as Bob Lee reassembling a rifle...This is an outstanding thriller on every level.”— Booklist (starred review)“Nobody writes action better than Stephen Hunter, and that action has never been better than in the scintillatingly superb G-Man ....At heart G-Man is a modern day Western...with the two generations of Swaggers swapping sections as they command our attention in riveting fashion.... G-Man is everything a great action thriller is supposed to be, presenting us with a series of targets Hunter manages to hit dead center every time. An old-fashioned shoot-em-up that is absolutely not to be missed.”—Jon Land, Providence Journal “Hunter remains my only Pulitzer Prize-winning friend.xa0 He has a new novel titled G-MAN, which I can highly recommend after having devoured it in a weekend.”—Mark A. Keefe IV, Editor-in-Chief, American Rifleman “Fans of Hunter's Swagger family legend will be locked and loaded for more.”— Kirkus Reviews Stephen Hunter is the author ofxa020 novels and the retired chief film critic for T he Washington Post , where he won the 2003 Pulitzer Prize for Distinguished Criticism. His novels include The Third Bullet; Sniper's Honor; I, Sniper; I, Ripper; and Point of Impact , which was adapted for film and TV as Shooter. Hunter lives in Baltimore, Maryland. Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved. ***This excerpt is from an advance uncorrected copy proof*** Copyright © 2017 Stephen Hunter PRELUDE EAST OF BLUE EYE, ARKANSAS The present The blades of the graders contoured the land to spec. They rounded hills, felled and flattened woods, scoured underbrush, crushed rocks, filled hollows, collapsed ravines. Nothing but raw earth remained. What had been complex became plain, according to the latest large-project construction principles. Streets had been staked out, while sewers and wiring and cable were planted in furrows. Then the houses would spring up, rows of them, all alike, but soon to be differentiated by their new owners. It was progress—or, at least, development—it was growth, it was capitalism, it was hope. It couldn’t be stopped, so mourning was pointless. This land had sustained one family for close to two centuries, first claimed in the late 1780s by a quiet couple from over the mountains, where the war was just finishing. They gave no account of themselves. They and theirs stayed for seven generations, and for that whole time they were steady, solid; they went to church, they gave to charity, they did their share in emergency or crisis. But more, it turned out they were a family of heroes. Their boys learned to hunt; they learned the hunter’s patience, his stoicism, his courage, his mercy, his honor. They had a gift for the firearm, and more than a few of them took that gift off to war. Some made it back, some didn’t. Some became officers of the law, for in those days that too called for the shooter’s talent. They shot for blood many a time, and, again, some made it back and some didn’t. They were all gone now. The last of them had sold off the place for a substantial amount and fled, not wanting to see what was done to his home- stead and the homestead of his ancestors. Now the contouring was all but finished. Only the old house remained, atop a hillock that dominated the spread, a comfortable, rambling joint that had been added to over the decades until it practically made no sense at all. The hill was too much for the graders and so the company brought in a big Cat excavator, the 326F L model, a machine classified medium by weight, and set it loose, under the guidance of a professional genius named Ralph. From afar, it looked like some kind of Jurassic ritual. A yellow Tyrannosaurus rex had downed a Bronto or a Stegosaurus and now fed on soft underbelly. The knuckle boom of Ralph’s big Cat pierced and ripped and tore, its bucket armed with side cutters and teeth, taking down walls and floors swiftly, in a single day reducing what had been a large house to a large pile of rubble. The next day, using the bucket as an artist would a brush, Ralph cleared the shattered remnants of two centuries’ worth of history, loading them into the trucks, which hauled them off to the landfill. Finally, on the third day, only the foundation remained, and he directed the bucket to continue its feast of destruction, smashing the stones into smaller chunks, then scooping them up for disposal. It was all going according to plan—until it wasn’t. The managers saw him stop, pop the big machine out of gear, turn off its hydraulics, then leap from the yellow house, dash along the tread and swing down off the boom, pass under the knuckle, and reach the bucket, which was frozen in place on a particularly large chunk of foundation that would not shatter according to plan. They approached and swiftly became an inspection committee. “Something wrong, Ralph?” “You didn’t bust a pump or lose a piston?” “Did you spring a hydraulic leak there, Ralph?” Of course all this really meant but one thing: how much is this going to cost us? But Ralph was on his knees, studying on the joinery between the bucket’s teeth—those hard T. rex fangs—and earth. “I felt something,” he said. “You know, you get so you can read the vibrations. It wasn’t stone, dirt, pipe—nothing like that.” He poked, prodded, messed around with a shovel. “What’d it feel like?” he was asked. “Some kind of metal. I don’t know, a sheet or a—” He stopped, spotting something, leaped forward, examined more closely, inserted the shovel’s blade, dug, pried, cleared, sought leverage, and finally, with a spray of dirt like an explosion, exposed something from the Great Beneath. “Jesus,” he said, now pulling the treasure free, “it’s a strongbox of some kind.” It was, looking like the sort of thing carried by Wells Fargo and subject to larceny by men in dusters and hats, with bandannas across their faces and Winchesters in their hands. The committee gathered around. Curiosity now overcame their need, if only for a bit, to stay on schedule. “Maybe it’s full of gold,” somebody remarked. Ralph, whose genius was practical, not speculative, smacked at the padlock a few times with his shovel, expertly driving the corner tip of its blade under the locking hasp, and the hasp’s old metal couldn’t bear the spike in pressure and broke open on the third blow. The committee gathered closer as he tossed the busted lock away and pulled the lid back on the strongbox’s rusted hinges. The contents were initially disappointing. A number of objects wrapped tightly in heavy canvas, loosely secured by disintegrating tape, their outlines muffled by the heavy swaddling. Ralph popped a Kershaw knife from the pocket of his jeans, where it had been clipped, cut the tape, and used the point of the blade to push through the mass of canvas. It gave way to an oily cloth wrapping, under which the thing, shed of its canvas raiments, assumed a familiar shape. At last, he got this final oily wrapping away from it and held it out, gleaming in the sun, for all to see. “It’s a damned pistol,” he proclaimed. “It’s an old .45 automatic,” someone who knew said. “Old?” someone else said. “Hell, it looks brand-new!” They were otherwise stunned into silence. Finally someone said, “Man, I bet that bad boy has a story to tell.” --This text refers to the hardcover edition. Read more

Features & Highlights

  • “A roaring good read.”—FORBES.com
  • Master sniper Bob Lee Swagger returns in this riveting novel by bestselling author and Pulitzer Prize winner Stephen Hunter
  • .
  • The Great Depression was marked by an epidemic of bank robberies and Tommy-gun-toting outlaws who became household names. Hunting them down was the new U.S. Division of Investigation--soon to become the FBI--which was determined to nab the most dangerous gangster this country has ever produced: Baby Face Nelson. To stop him, the Bureau recruited talented gunman Charles Swagger, World War I hero and sheriff of Polk County, Arkansas.Eighty years later, Charles's grandson Bob Lee Swagger uncovers a strongbox containing an array of memorabilia dating back to 1934--a federal lawman's badge, a .45 automatic preserved in cosmoline, a mysterious gun part, and a cryptic diagram--all belonging to Charles Swagger. Bob becomes determined to find out what happened to his grandfather-- and why his own father never spoke of Charles. But as he investigates, Bob learns that someone is following him--and shares his obsession.Told in alternating timeframes,
  • G-Man
  • is a thrilling addition to Stephen Hunter's bestselling Bob Lee Swagger series.

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Most Helpful Reviews

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Hunter finds another fun way to extend the Swagger saga

In his wonderful Swagger series, Stephen Hunter faces the limitations series authors often do as their characters age. Bob Lee Swagger is 71 now. Previous books have detailed most of his life, leaving little room for new episodes to be inserted.

We also know the key parts of his late dad Earl Swagger’s life — from winning the Medal of Honor at Iwo Jima, to coming close to suicide upon his return, to being gunned down in 1955, with adventures in Hot Springs and Havana in between — and, likewise, not much room for addition here.

So this story extends back to Charles Swagger, Earl’s dad and Bob’s grandpa. Distant, more formal and remote, he served as local sheriff. Earl was never close to him. He died in 1942 and is pretty much a closed book to Bob. That is, until construction workers, demolishing the old Swagger homestead after Bob sells it for development, uncover a box with treasures in it: a government issued .45, a mint-condition thousand-dollar bill, an oddly shaped but finely machined piece of metal, and an FBI Special Agent badge.

Bob sets off to solve the mystery, and quickly narrows the time in question to 1934, the date on the bill. Archives show Charles, as local sheriff, missing from local newspapers for six months.

That also happens to be the time when the FBI’s war raged on infamous bank-robbing desperados from John Dillinger to Bonnie and Clyde and, most centrally to this book, Baby Face Nelson.

The FBI has embarrassed itself in pursuing them, most recently at a shootout that not only didn’t catch any of them but killed civilians as well. They need help from a real gunfighter — both on the front lines and in training their own men — and their search leads them to Swagger. (Of course.)

And Bob Lee’s historical quest leads him to his old buddy, retired FBI agent Nick Memphis. Memphis understands the culture of J. Edgar Hoover’s FBI, where agents dreaded personally drawing favorable news coverage that might trigger Hoover’s jealous ire. Memphis has the forensic chops to analyze typewritten documents, distinguishing two different typists by their strokes and realizing original documents had a name deleted and another inserted - one the exact same length as “Charles Swagger”.

That leaves Bob Lee free to concentrate on his own area of expertise: guns. We learn a lot about the fearsome Thompson submachine guns, revolvers and semi-automatics of the period, and the Colt Monitor, a machine gun even more terrifying. It’s a shortened, lightened version of a military assault weapon, the Browning Automatic Rifle, designed for law enforcement. But one falls into the hands of Baby Face Nelson.

The central character of the story, he doesn’t like the name. His real name is Lester Gillis. He’s somewhat of a psychopath, incongruously deeply loyal to and taken with his lovely wife Helen, mother of his two children. He’s a lead character of a group also including Dillinger, Pretty Boy Floyd, and others who didn’t get as much publicity.

Dillinger is sexy and cool, with an endless string of beautiful girlfriends, and gives off an air of ‘everything will be OK’ to the yeggs he works with. He’s not much of a planner, but cool in the clutch and everyone likes being around him. Floyd is a moron, too stupid to hold back on violence when doing so would be smart.

Nelson’s the smartest, and also the most vicious, taking a visceral pleasure in the Thompson .45 submachine gun. (I love that Hunter’s characters never call them “Tommy guns”. They’re either “Thompsons” or “machinos”, in gangster slang.) The gun’s murderous fire drives him to ecstasy, as does the Colt Monitor when he first shoots one.

The gang methodically plots bank robberies across the Midwest. The FBI is under major pressure to stop them. If it means just shooting them on sight, that’s fine. It doesn’t help that, with the Depression deepening, the robbers are becoming folk heroes who rob the wicked home-foreclosing banks. Much of the public roots for them.

The emergent Mafia, not yet called that, meanwhile quietly helps them. While the FBI trumpets endlessly the fight against one bank-robber gang -- bank robbery being a federal crime they can legally investigate -- they ignore the rise of organized crime. The Mob now methodically moves its Prohibition profits into the legal economy, corrupting it. All the publicity going to the bank robbers helps the Mafiosi remain in the shadows.

This book is just loaded with information about an era receding into history, accessible if at all mostly by film remakes of remakes. Hunter puts it into great perspective and with his usual panache. Dillinger is remembered by history as the lead robber of that milieu, but it was really Nelson, and he was the more interesting character. Hunter gives him his due here, and there’s all the gunfight detail and drama a Swagger novel demands.
46 people found this helpful
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Please lay off the politics!!

Mr. Hunter writes a colorful depiction of the 1930's gangsters and the G-Men who hunt them. A year before the the FBI was stood up in 1934. There are plenty of firearm action and gun fights. There are lots of technical details that come from exhaustive research. I have been reading Mr. Hunters books for years and this has always been his tact. I'm waiting patiently for his next book.

The Rant. For whatever reason, Mr. Hunter, a liberal, injected a small amount of politics into his book. He put in an undeserved knock against Fox News and indicated that the economy had not picked up since the "new" president assumed office. Looking at the 2017 publication date we can take a good guess as to who he is referring to. This criticism of his is not true since the +3% economy has improved significantly in every category since he assumed office. This has been accomplished without taxpayer funded Quantitative Easing (QE) as employed by the previous president. You can ask any employee of the manufacturing sector about this. If Mr. Hunter opens the political can of worms then I (we) have a right to call him on it and refute any inaccuracies. Using politics in books to promote an agenda is an unwise risk for any fiction writer since part of their reader base are potentially alienated. Not good.
21 people found this helpful
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Stephen Hunter's G-Man: Two-bit characters, cliche, more cliche and again cliche

Probably the the lowest point of the gradually declining in quality Hunter's Swaggger series. Hanter tests to the very limits uncanny ability of all Swaggers to appear in the best Forrest Gump's manner in famous events of XX century. Two-bit characters, cliche, more cliche and again cliche, copied and pasted from previous novels about bitch duty, death wish and lone cowboy image attributed to all Swaggers. Totally unconvincing master villain in debt to Russian mafia, weakly and unconvincingly substantiated motivation for Italian mafia to rat Dillinger and Co. Disappointed again and again. At least in some portions of The Third Bullet I had a feeling of the good ol Stephen Hunter, not in G-Man.
8 people found this helpful
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Stephen Hunter's G-Man: Two-bit characters, cliche, more cliche and again cliche

Probably the the lowest point of the gradually declining in quality Hunter's Swaggger series. Hanter tests to the very limits uncanny ability of all Swaggers to appear in the best Forrest Gump's manner in famous events of XX century. Two-bit characters, cliche, more cliche and again cliche, copied and pasted from previous novels about bitch duty, death wish and lone cowboy image attributed to all Swaggers. Totally unconvincing master villain in debt to Russian mafia, weakly and unconvincingly substantiated motivation for Italian mafia to rat Dillinger and Co. Disappointed again and again. At least in some portions of The Third Bullet I had a feeling of the good ol Stephen Hunter, not in G-Man.
8 people found this helpful
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One of his better later efforts

The first Bobby Lee Swagger novels, Black Light, Point of Impact, Time to Hunt - fantastic in the same way his earlier, non-Swagger novels were also great (and there were a lot of them). Hunter was one of my favorite writers. But, as happens with so many heroes, Swagger peaked and then started going downhill, Swagger becoming not just a superb world-class sniper, hunter, fighter, but one almost with super-powers. It's fiction and people want heroes with exceptional abilities. But Hunter has Lee, in the 4th novel, defeat the world's greatest sword-fighter (I mean fighter for keeps, not foils) after a little practice. Please. Yes, there's a plot device that enables him to prevail despite being outmatched, but, he should have been dead in a fraction of a second. He even gets to pass his super-human powers, apparently purely by DNA (as his son was a grown man when they met), to his children. I guess they have a lot of midi-chlorians, if you get my drift.

You can apply this same problem to many heroes, of course. Take the heroine of the "The Girl Who . . ." series. Lisbeth goes from being an exceptionally gifted investigator in the first novel to a virtual super-hero in the next two. By the third novel you know she could beat up any man or more than one, solve mysteries of the world, etc., and it ruined the books for me. That and the super-powered sexuality of her and others in the book. You could certainly say the same of many author's popular heroes, such as Reacher (and I generally call these Reacher books, though Child obviously did not invent this characterization).

We don't judge every author, hero and series the same. Each book series is written at a certain level of reality. Star Wars requires the maximum amount of suspension of disbelief. And, in turn, we are willing to accept unbelievable things about the characters. We can accept some of them manipulating objects by a type of telepathy. Reacher is more realistic, but it is written in a style that is not meant to be completely so and so we still accept a certain amount of disbelief. But, for example, no one would accept it if Reacher could suddenly levitate objects. Bobby Lee Swagger novels are also fantasies, but one in which we are meant to take it even more seriously than say Reacher novels and hence require more realism. Hence, we suspend less disbelief for Swagger than for Reacher and less disbelief for Reacher than for Skywalker. This is why I stopped reading (mostly) Swagger novels. I couldn't suspend disbelief in the world he set up. The same thing happened with the stories about Earl Swagger, Bobby Lee's father. In particular Hot Springs and Pale Horse Coming were excellent. Havana went over the top.

I'm also a little done with Bobby Lee's legendary stoicism and humility (something we happily don't have to deal with in Reacher), just because it gets boring. I know, I know, he thinks he's just your average Joe. Yeah. Sure.

Thus, one of my favorite writers became ho-hum to me. After the 47th Samurai, I have become much slower to read one of his novels (though I've read a good deal of them). I tried the Kennedy book and quickly bailed out. The adventures of Earl, Bobby Lee's father, kind of re-vitalized Swagger. It showed off Hunter's writing talents. He captured an earlier time well, and it was well researched (without drowning us in it) and imaginative at the same time.

A friend told me to give this one a try and I'm glad I did. It's a very good book. Charles, Bobby Lee's grandfather, is a great character, if also a stereotypical John Wayne gunfighter. As a negative, I didn't think the reveals were as well done as the rest (there were two, really, one about Charles' own secret burden, and one about what happened to him vis-a-vis the FBI). They were kind of dropped in there, almost as deus ex machina.

But, the fun in the story was the ride, the characterizations of the still famous Dillinger gang that I grew up knowing about, particularly Baby Face Nelson, the preparation, the chases, the guns and the gunfights. When a fictional novel encourages you to go read about the real history, it's a good book. I might even go back and give a few of the remaining books a shot (no pun intended).
6 people found this helpful
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BIG Swagger Family Fan...

...especially of the novels (HOT SPRINGS, et all) dealing with Bob Lee's father Earl, a hard-bitten law dog who very much informs Stephen Hunter's primary protagonist Bob Lee.
That said, G-MAN is the most disappointing and unsatisfying of the entire Swagger oeuvre... and cheeky, as well. The conceit of inserting Bob Lee's grandfather, Sheriff Charles Swagger, into a number of historical events and revealing that it was Charles, detached to the Chicago office of the fledgling FBI, who actually shot and killed John Dillinger, Charles "Pretty Boy" Floyd and Lester "Baby Face Nelson" Gilles, is outrageous even under the rubric of literary license.
And then the are the factual errors, the most egregious of which involves the seminal Dade County, Florida event in which an eight agent FBI squad was shot to pieces by essentially one hard case bank robber, killing two agents. Hunter dates it as "August 1986" rather than the actual April 22, 1986.
Also curious is the inclusion, in the present day narrative, of two members of the Grumley "Dixie Mafia" (thank you, Elmore Leonard!) crime family of gun thugs. The two represented here, inteaction with Bob Lee, come across as well-spoken, well-educated and about as dangerous as Scrooge McDuck's celebrated antgonists, The Beagle Boys! The sense is that Braxton and Rawley Grumley will be revisited in some future novel.
Which brings me to the last point, the brief and wholly unexpected introduction of Charles Swagger's latent homosexuality... WHA-AT? It's touched on as a serious issue for the Arkansas gunfighter and WW I hero, then quickly adandoned. To give Hunter his due, from the little we know about Bob Lee's grandfather, he fought the bottle and was a cruel beater of Bob Lee's uncle (Earl's handicapped brother) later in life, so perhaps this aspect of Charles Swagger's personality will be explored in a subsequent novel.
G-MAN was eagerly anticipated, and read straight through with a growing sense of dismay over the errors in fact, the poor proof-reading and the marginal coherence of the present day plot-line.
As I said, disappointed and dissatisfied.
5 people found this helpful
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"Hillbilly justice"

I can remember picking up Stephen Hunter's first book in the Bob Lee Swagger at the library by chance not long after it was first published in 1993. I don't know why I picked it up that day. It wasn't any of the genres of books I normally read. And I didn't read it right away. I kept putting it off. So one afternoon I opened to the first page of POINT OF IMPACT and started reading and I was enthralled. I couldn't tear myself away from the story that Hunter so masterfully told. And that book still holds a place in the top 10 Books I've ever read.

After that I really enjoyed the next few books in the Bob Lee and Earl Swagger series. But then the books started to lose focus and lose my interest. I did enjoy SNIPER'S HONOR and I enjoyed this offering, I think because Bob Lee had a bigger part in this story.

Bob Lee is 71 years young in this story. He's sold off some family property in Arkansas and as the house on the property is being torn down, a metal box is discovered and the contents send Bob Lee and his friend, Nick Memphis, on a fact finding mission trying to learn more about Bob Lee's grandfather, Charles Swagger.

The story alternates between 1934, Charles, and a number of well-known gangsters of that time, and current day with Bob Lee and Nick.

I enjoyed the story especially the gangster history. I probably liked his last story more - SNIPER'S HONOR - but this one was still well worth reading.

I received this book from Blue Rider Press through Net Galley in exchange for my unbiased review.
5 people found this helpful
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Not his typical novel

If you have liked Steven Hunters novels in the past, you might want to pass on this one. Not only does he go into extended flowery diatribes when describing shoot outs, but I never thought of any Swagger as a homosexual. It just didn't fit the story line he was trying to portray. It seemed the only reason he added it was for shock value, because it only appears on one page.
4 people found this helpful
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Not his typical novel

If you have liked Steven Hunters novels in the past, you might want to pass on this one. Not only does he go into extended flowery diatribes when describing shoot outs, but I never thought of any Swagger as a homosexual. It just didn't fit the story line he was trying to portray. It seemed the only reason he added it was for shock value, because it only appears on one page.
4 people found this helpful
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When does the story start?

I got lost in the backstory and history. Ordinarily Hunter moves along with the plot, but he seems as tired as Bob Lee. Not worth finishing.
3 people found this helpful