![Norco '80](https://dl.bookem.ir/covers/ISBN13/9781640092136.jpg)
Norco '80
The True Story of the Most Spectacular Bank Robbery in American History
فرمت کتاب
ebook
تاریخ انتشار
2019
Lexile Score
1110
Reading Level
7-9
نویسنده
Peter Houlahanناشر
Catapultشابک
9781640092136
کتاب های مرتبط
- اطلاعات
- نقد و بررسی
- دیدگاه کاربران
نقد و بررسی
![Publisher's Weekly](https://images.contentreserve.com/pw_logo.png)
April 22, 2019
Vague sourcing and fictionalization mar EMT Houlahan’s otherwise promising first book, an account of a bank robbery whose aftermath left dead on both sides of the law. In 1980, five heavily armed men, led by George Wayne Smith and Christopher Harven, held up the Security Pacific Bank in Norco, Calif. Smith and Harven weren’t typical thieves. They wanted the money because they believed that “America was on the verge of a catastrophe of biblical proportions, one in which only the well-armed and well-prepared would survive.” The execution of their plot was poor. Explosives planted some distance from the bank, intended as a diversion that would draw law enforcement away from the scene of the crime, didn’t explode as planned. At one point, Houlihan enters the mind of Billy Delgado, the driver of the robbers’ van, and conveys his thoughts. Soon afterward, a bullet to the neck mortally wounds Billy. “His body seemed to disappear on him. He could not feel it at all.... The only thing he could feel was a sharp stinging at the back of his neck.” This may be plausible, but it remains speculation, and an author note on sources, in which he says, “Everything presented, whether in dialogue or narrative, is as factual as I could determine based on a wide range of sources,” does nothing to reassure readers that he has not used dramatic license elsewhere. That Houlahan writes well suggests he’s capable of doing better next time. Agent: Jeff Ourvan, Jennifer Lyons Literary.
![Library Journal](https://images.contentreserve.com/libraryjournal_logo.png)
June 1, 2019
This is the wild story of a group of heavily armed religious zealots who rob a small town California bank and wind up in a massive shootout and chase with local law enforcement. Unlike typical bank robbers, this band of criminals had an unusual fixation with preparing for the end of days, spurred on by their charismatic born-again Christian leader. Their fanatical beliefs, combined with an array of weapons and artillery they'd acquired, made their run-in with police and subsequent chase one of the most violent incidents of the 1970s, with repercussions felt throughout law enforcement agencies around the country. The book's style is a little raw--the liberal use of expletives in the narrative may be jarring for some--but the author skillfully lays out the facts, and his vivid descriptions bring the shootout and courtroom drama to life. VERDICT This will be right at home in the true crime section of any public library.--Amelia Osterud, Milwaukee P.L.
Copyright 2019 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.
![Kirkus](https://images.contentreserve.com/kirkus_logo.png)
Thrilling account of a violent California bank robbery whose damage "keeps rippling out through the generations." Houlahan's debut is remarkable for the exhaustive, sometimes exhausting level of detail he brings to every stage of the story, transforming a pulpy true-crime narrative into a reflection of social transformations and class conflict as the countercultural 1970s faded into the Reagan era. The author argues that the robbers, aimless blue-collar friends who'd dabbled in evangelicalism and doomsday scenarios, "were looking at American society and seeing a house of cards teetering on collapse." The crime was meant to bankroll plans for a survivalist compound; yet their sense of rage was indicated by the arsenal of assault rifles and improvised explosives. The amateurish robbery devolved into a running firefight with outgunned law enforcement officers which Houlahan documents as an exacting, extended set piece. Following a massive, improvised police response, the criminals fled into nearby wilderness after killing one officer, wounding many others, and being wounded themselves, only to be captured the next day. As one stunned cop observed in the aftermath, "we just got our asses kicked, didn't we?" The author then goes into the long, chaotic trial. With the three surviving suspects universally loathed and the death penalty in the balance, it became an early media circus marked by "insolence, impertinence, and contemptuous and childish behavior." Houlahan follows up on the robbery's long shadow over many officers and civilians who were caught in the melee, delving into subtopics including the evolution of tactics in response to such crimes and departments' reluctance to offer counseling for PTSD, which compelled some embittered survivors to leave policing. Houlahan's writing is dense, sometimes colloquial, well-researched, and mostly clear. While his enthusiastic focus on details of the hardscrabble region's history, characters' social backgrounds, the botched robbery and its bloody aftermath, the weapons and tactics used by both sides, and finally the long-term changes in policing can occasionally overwhelm, most readers will stay engrossed. An impressively well-rendered true-crime saga.
COPYRIGHT(2019) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. (Online Review)
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