Books: Deadly Force: In the Streets With the U.S. Marshals Lobby  |  FAQ  |  Feedback  |  Today In History  | 

Books   e-Books   Music   Video   DVD   Computers   Camera/Photo   Electronics   Games   Toys   Housewares   Tools/Hardware   Outdoor Living   Software   For Dogs   Free Software Aisle   Worth Keeping  

Free DVD Rack   The Periodical Stand   Fantastic Audio Books   The Electronics Shelf   The Baby Place   Best Tools And Hardware   The Ideal Gift Store   CellPhone AddOns   Religious Books   Video Crossroads   eBook Universe   Top Line Software   Great Jokes And Gags   The Maple Book Corner   The Better Toy!   True Book Corner   The Sound Station   The Sheet Music Stand  


Spanish Shipwreck Medallion


 
Return To Prev Page

 Books: Deadly Force: In the Streets With the U.S. Marshals
by Carsten Stroud

Click To See More Info
Click Image For More Info

Buy Now!

Click HERE for ...

  • Prices (new/used)
  • Availability
  • Additional Images
  • Similar Links
  • More Reviews
  • Additional Information

  • Paperback: 448 pages ; Dimensions (in inches): 1.08 x 6.88 x 4.18
  • Publisher: Bantam Books; (October 1997)
  • In-Print Editions: Hardcover

Customers who bought this book also bought:
Review

Amazon.com
From the Tom Waits lyrics at the beginning, to the final lines when the manhunter stands over the handcuffed form of his prey, thinking, "Bring on the next contestant," Deadly Force delivers the heart-pounding speed of an action movie. The story takes place in three bursts--11 hours in January '95 in New York City, a flashback to 2 days in May '94 in Washington, D.C., then 9 days more in January '95 to wrap up the chase. But the hero, U.S. Marshal Luke Zitto, doesn't just "get his man": through the voice of the author, Carsten Stroud, he spouts off about suits and bulls and furballs, tells one wild story after another, and illustrates, through his own misbegotten career, what he calls a "corrosive flood of institutional paranoia throughout the federal justice establishment."

Despite the sexy flash of its language, it's a solid, convincing book. You'll learn a lot here about the history of the U. S. Marshals and about the turf wars between the FBI, CIA, and several other three-letter agencies. The highly dramatic style, though, makes it hard to tell how much is factual. Maybe that's not a drawback, if Marshal Zitto's paranoia is justified. --Fiona Webster

More Reviews