Front Sight, Stephen Hunter
Front Sight, Stephen Hunter
12 Rating(s)
List: $29.99 | Sale: $21.00
Club: $14.99

Front Sight
Three Swagger Novellas

Author: Stephen Hunter

Narrator: Eric G. Dove

Unabridged: 13 hr 12 min

Format: Digital Audiobook Download

Published: 01/23/2024


Synopsis

A collection of three interconnected novellas that follow each generation of the iconic Swagger family—grandfather Charles, father Earl, and fan favorite hero Bob Lee—from New York Times bestselling author, Pulitzer Prize winner, and “true master at the pinnacle of his craft” (Jack Carr, #1 New York Times bestselling author) Stephen Hunter.

In City of Meat, Charles Swagger is on the hunt for notorious bank robber Baby Face Nelson when he traces a tip to the Chicago stock yards. While there, he’s brutally assaulted by a madman involved in a nearby narcotics ring. The ring plans to spread its new drug to the residents of the disenfranchised 7th District of Chicago and to make matters worse, this is no ordinary drug—it makes some users happy, drives others insane, and kills many of the rest. Will Charles be able to stop the ring before it’s too late? Or is he in over his head among the dark streets of Chicago?

Earl Swagger investigates a violent bank robbery that left two dead and a fortune missing in small-town Maryland in Johnny Tuesday. At every turn, however, he’s met with silence and hostility from the townsfolk, which makes sense when he uncovers municipal corruption, gang politics, jaded aristocrats, scheming gamblers, a hitman, a femme fatale, and a whole bunch of men with guns. Luckily, Earl has brought his own guns in this unputdownable noir mystery.

Finally, in Five Dolls for the Gut Hook, a thirty-two-year-old Bob Lee Swagger is back from Vietnam nearly broken over good men lost for nothing. He’s turned down that whiskey road to hell. But one afternoon he’s awakened from his nightmares by two men with a problem. As nearby Hot Springs tries to retool its image from gambling paradise to family resort, a butcher has begun to prey on the city’s young women, a figure straight out of a horror movie. Hot Springs Homicide is baffled and recruit Bob’s help. “I’m a sniper,” says Bob, “not a detective.”

“But,” comes the reply, “you are the son and grandson of two of the greatest detectives this state has ever produced.” On that premise alone, Bob takes up the hunt for a killer who not only kills but desecrates. At the same time, we understand that Bob Lee Swagger is also hunting for his own salvation.

About Stephen Hunter

Stephen Hunter is creator of the Bob Lee Swagger novels as well as many others. The retired chief film critic for The Washington Post, where he won the 2003 Pulitzer Prize for Distinguished Criticism, he has also published two collections of film criticism and a nonfiction work, American Gunfight. He lives in Baltimore, Maryland.


Reviews

Goodreads review by Abibliofob on February 28, 2024

Charles Swagger, Earl Swagger and Bob Lee Swagger all get one part of this book by my favorite author Stephen Hunter. Front Sight takes us to three different eras in time, one for each Swagger. But why is there no story with Ray Cruz? He is also a Swagger. I have loved this writer since I stumbled u......more

Goodreads review by Craig on March 28, 2024

I really enjoy the Earl Swagger series of stories.......more

Goodreads review by J on December 14, 2023

Thanks to Netgalley and the publisher for this eARC. A wonderful collection that fills in the history of Bob Lee Swagger, a 5-star home run for Stephen Hunter fans!......more

Goodreads review by Carole on January 22, 2024

Three generations of detectives must each solve a crime that others can not. Many readers are familiar with Stephen Hunter’s books featuring sniper Bob Lee Swagger, who comes from a line of men known both for their skill with guns and their ability to find solutions to crimes that leave others baffle......more

Goodreads review by Jeremy on August 02, 2024

Adequate thriller, a fast read. Characters, not human beings. More or less straight mysteries that end in gunfights. Somehow it seems important to Hunter that his violent men aren’t racists. Okay, Jan.......more