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The Prop: A Novel
 
 

The Prop: A Novel [Paperback]

Pete Hautman

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Product Details

  • Paperback: 320 pages
  • Publisher: Simon & Schuster; Original edition (Mar 28 2006)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0743284658
  • ISBN-13: 978-0743284653
  • Product Dimensions: 21.4 x 14.1 x 2 cm
  • Shipping Weight: 318 g
  • Amazon Bestsellers Rank: #587,720 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

Product Description

From Publishers Weekly

Hautman's Godless (2005) won a National Book Award for Young People's Fiction, but his impressive, sharply written new crime thriller is definitely for adults—especially those who would rather play poker than do anything else. Peeky Kane, an attractive woman in her 40s, is a prop—hired to keep shorthanded poker games going at a casino owned by a Native American tribe near Tucson, Ariz. She gets paid $110 per eight-hour-shift plus health insurance, keeps any money she wins at the tables (and must make up any losses out of her own pocket). Because she's shrewd and talented, Peeky has managed to put together a small nest egg, some of which goes to her troubled 21-year-old daughter, Jaymie. Peeky's lover, Buddy Balcomb, is also a poker addict, whose own winning streak may be over. Peeky's life takes a few sharp turns after some crooked dealers find a new way to steal money and make her an unwilling accomplice. As this short but action-packed novel shows, Hautman is the kind of cool, expert player who keeps the cards coming. (Apr.)
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

From Booklist

*Starred Review* Hautman won a National Book Award for the YA novel Godless (2004), and he plays a lot of poker, so it's no surprise he's an assured storyteller who knows his way around the felt. His latest poker-themed crime novel, with its crisp pacing, slick plot, and canny characters, will have readers already caught up in the Texas Hold 'Em craze nodding along with knowing pleasure while it lights a fire under everyone else to buy a rack of chips. Patty "Peeky" Kane works as a "prop" at an Arizona Indian casino, which means she fills out shorthanded poker games on behalf of management but plays--and wins--with her own stake. A cop's widow who was briefly on the force herself, Peeky is cruising into middle age when she notices a couple of dealers scamming jackpots. She keeps quiet, but then an insane posse of clowns steals a million bucks from the cage and kills several people in the process. Signs point to an inside job, and Peeky finds herself both under suspicion and roped into investigating the crime--even as she must track down her troubled daughter with a potentially violent son-in-law. There's a lot of muss and a little fuss, but Peeky maintains her wry, letting-it-all-hang-out vibe come hell or bad boyfriends. As an addition to the mystery game, she's as welcome as pocket aces. Frank Sennett
Copyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved

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Amazon.com: 3.7 out of 5 stars (7 customer reviews)

2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Hang On - This is a Good One!, Oct 25 2006
By John R. Linnell - Published on Amazon.com
This review is from: The Prop: A Novel (Paperback)
This is my first Pete Hautman book in some time and it was well worth the wait. I enjoy books that involve gambling and are well written and this one surely qualifies. It is right up there with James Swain's numerous books involving Tony Valentine.

In using Patty Kane as the narrator, Hautman does a difficult thing. I could find no place in the book where I felt "Peekey" as she is called, was anything less than authentic.

I spend half the year in Tucson, so I was familiar with the venues she described which were not fiction. However, the Casino Santa Cruz has yet to be built (which is probably a good thing) and while Hautman may live in Minnesota, he has certainly spent a fair amount of time in The Old Pueblo.

If you like a book that is fast paced, has a lot of interesting characters and spins a yarn that keeps you turning the pages, this is for you. I loved it.

2 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Nacho Noir, April 10 2006
By Ron Edison - Published on Amazon.com
This review is from: The Prop: A Novel (Paperback)
I've been a fan of Pete Hautman since his quirky DRAWING DEAD. Hautman himself is a big poker fan and the poker theme runs through much of his work--including STONE COLD, his cautionary young adult novel. The tone here is much more noir than his previous work, so if you enjoy that end of the genre, you'll be at home here. For myself, I know next to nothing about poker but that didn't stop me from enjoying this novel. Hautman nails the casino environment, the poker jargon, the breezy dialogue, tribal politics, and makes excellent use of the Arizona setting. But it's the vivid characters that make the book shine. Peeky Kane is an atypical female protagonist, sort of a low-key, blowzy-but-wiser Stephanie Plum, on the cusp of middle age and carrying far more baggage. She and the other characters will haunt you long after you put this one down. The first person/present tense voice and just-right word choices raise the literary bar for crime fiction. Genre writing just doesn't get any better than this.

At writing conferences, Hautman is quick to point out that Elmore Leonard was a major influence. For my money, I'd rather read the next Pete Hautman than the next Elmore Leonard. THE PROP earns him a spot at the top of the pantheon.

4.0 out of 5 stars Good mystery, although too much poker for me, Jan 11 2009
By Bort "book reader" - Published on Amazon.com
This review is from: The Prop: A Novel (Paperback)
The Prop is a book I picked up off a clearance rack at Borders. I read two young adult novels by the author, Pete Hautman. Godless was a book I enjoyed, but I was more ambivalent toward Invisible.

The Prop is about Peeky, a middle-aged woman who works as a prop player at a Tucson Indian casino. A prop player is someone employed by the casino to prop up the action at a poker table when players leave and the game is shorthanded. Peeky enjoys her work and is successful at it. Things begin to change when she shares in a jackpot meant for someone else in a fixed game. Even though she suspects it was fixed, she feels she is due for some luck and that it is the job of the security staff to catch the cheaters.

Following the fixed game, Peeky is playing at the casino when four men wearing clown costumes burst into the card room with guns. The robbery quickly goes bad, as four people end up dead, although the robbers make off with over one million dollars. Peeky is disheartened to realize that one of the robbers is her boyfriend, Buddy, but she chooses not to reveal this fact to the authorities or her bosses at the casino.

In addition, Peeky's son-in-law Eduardo comes to her with the news that her daughter, Jaymie, is addicted to crack. Jaymie has been stealing money from Peeky to support her habit, and has now disappeared. Peeky and Eduardo become involved with lowlifes as they go in search of Jaymie.

Meanwhile, the reclusive founder of the casino comes to Peeky looking for help with the direction of the casino and with the robbery. He admires her way of reading people, the same quality that makes her successful at poker. Although he realizes she has not always been up front with him, he sees her as the only person who can help unravel the mysteries of what goes on at the casino. She agrees to become his eyes and ears, as she also tries to unravel the mysteries of exactly who her boyfriend is and what to do about her daughter.

I went into this book looking for something like Carl Hiaasen's writing, and while I noticed similarities, it wasn't quite as absurd. Maybe it is because it is hard to measure up to Hiaasen's depictions of Florida. Anyway, the story itself was engaging, with an interesting mix of unusual characters populating the casino. I was not very interested in the poker scenes, as I know nothing about Texas hold'em, but others might be more appreciative. As a mystery, it was enjoyable as a whole.
 Go to Amazon.com to see all 7 reviews  3.7 out of 5 stars 

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