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nonfiction

Absinthe
Bicycle! Manifesto
Burlesque
Django Reinhardt
Follies of Science
Generation What?
Mock Stars
Ramble
Ramble Colorado
Roller Derby
Roadside Bicycle Repair
Scooters

fiction

Baantjer
Inspector DeKok Investigates
Steve Brewer
Boost
Bullets
Peter Guttridge
Nick Madrid Mysteries
Randall Peffer
Killing Neptune's Daughter


Paperback:

Hardcover:

Boost

By Steve Brewer

Price: $14 Paperback, $24 Hardcover

Crime Fiction
ISBN : 1-933108-02-9 (PB), 0-9725776-5-3 (HC)
51⁄2" x 81⁄4", 252 pages,

Available Now

Sam Hill steals cars. Not just any cars, but collectible cars, rare works of automotive artistry. Sam’s a specialist, and he’s made a good life for himself in Albuquerque, NM.

Things change one night after he steals a primo 1965 Thunderbird from a lawyer’s house. In the trunk, Sam finds a corpse, a police informant with a bullet hole between his eyes. And he learns that cops are swarming the garage where he’d planned to deliver the T-Bird.

Somebody set Sam up. Played a trick on him. And Sam, a prankster himself, can’t let it go. He must find whoever framed him, and get his revenge with an even bigger practical joke, one that soon has gangsters gunning for him and police on his tail.

Using his own resourcefulness as well as the assistance of his two pals, apprentice thief Billy Suggs and an inscrutable giant named Way-Way Henderson, Sam learns who’s behind the body in the trunk—Phil Ortiz, a notorious drug dealer and car collector.

Sam, it seems, boosted Ortiz’s favorite car—a green low-rider painted with the image of Our Lady of Guadalupe—and Ortiz is determined to get even. And to get that car back.

But Sam has other ideas. Such as sticking Ortiz with the body of the dead informant. Such as framing the sweaty salvage man who sided with Ortiz. Such as stealing the drug dealer’s entire collection of valuable cars.

The stakes get higher with each round of one-upsmanship. Finally, it’s clear that Ortiz won’t quit until he has the last laugh and Sam Hill’s dead.

In Boost, Brewer stirs up his usual potent mixture of high crime and low comedy in a rollicking novel where car thieves are the good guys and the action never stops.

Steve Brewer spent 22 years in the newspaper business before turning to fiction full-time in 1997. A weekly humor column he writes for the Albuquerque Tribune is distributed nationally by Scripps Howard News Service. He lives in Redding, California with his wife, two sons and a dog named Elvis.

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