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Too Lucky to Live

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

"In this entertaining, sexy debut, Allie is a sharp Stephanie Plum paired up with a hot partner... The original voice, humor, and unusual premise will appeal to Janet Evanovich readers." —Library Journal STARRED review

Lonely and broke, Cleveland divorce-survivor Allie Harper believes all her problems would be solved if she could find a nice, smart, hot guy and enough money to get her car fixed.

The hot guy arrives first: he's in a crosswalk clutching a bag of groceries while a blonde in a Hummer is leaning hard on her horn, sending the man's groceries and white cane flying. How has this woman missed the fact that the man is blind? From the curb, an outraged Allie jumps to his rescue, rebagging the groceries as well.

The money is in the bag. Literally—Thomas Bennington III, for that's who the handsome guy proves to be, has bought a MondoMegaJackpot ticket along with canned tomatoes. Allie takes him home and turns his groceries into dinner for two. Later that night, Tom hears the numbers announced. He's won. And he's less than thrilled. PhD Tom had gambled on the odds of losing (175 million to one) to prove a point to Rune, a kid from the projects he's befriended, that only losers buy lottery tickets. Instead, Rune, who'd helped pick the Mondo numbers, will share Tom's jackpot.

Allie and Tom grasp two things: one, they're hot for each other, and two, the ticket is a hot target, and now so are they. Every scheming weasel in Cleveland will be after Tom's millions. $550 of them. Yes, once the Mondo ball drops, it's game on with killers and kidnappers as players.

Allie and Tom need to get smarter about the threats all around them. On the run from one fancy hotel refuge to another and from one danger moment to the next, with only Allie's feisty landlady, Margo, and a couple of Cleveland cops for back-up, Allie and Tom evolve a strategy. First, turn in the ticket and claim the jackpot. Second, set up accounts to manage the millions. Third, stay alive to the end of the week...if they can.

Too Lucky to Live debuts a talented writer in Annie Hogsett and a couple in Allie and Tom, a modern Nick and Nora Charles, who can power a compelling, amusing series with an excellent future.

Somebody's Bound to Wind Up Dead series:

Too Lucky to Live (Book 1)

Murder to the Metal (Book 2)

The Devil's Own Game (Book 3)

Praise for Annie Hogsett:

"Fast pacing, multiple plot twists, and humor, including a Stephanie Plum-like main character, enliven the story and keep the pages turning." —Booklist for Too Lucky to Live

"The bittersweet mystery, with the open-ended threat of a villainous mastermind, is reminiscent of P.J. Tracy's early 'Monkeewrench' novels." —Library Journal for Murder to the Metal

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    • Publisher's Weekly

      February 13, 2017
      At the start of Hogsett’s fun debut, Thomas Bennington III, a blind English professor, comes close to losing a lottery ticket he’s purchased when he’s almost run over by a Hummer while crossing a Cleveland, Ohio, street. Fortunately, Allie Harper, who was waiting for a bus, comes to his rescue. Allie takes Tom back to her house, where they share dinner and hear on TV that Tom has won a $550 million jackpot. He’s shocked and none too pleased, having bought the ticket to prove to a youngster named Rune that the lottery is a waste of time and money. Rune, on the other hand, is thrilled about helping pick the winning numbers, but the news that he’s sharing the money lands him in danger. Within hours, three men are dead and Rune’s mother is hospitalized. Tom and Allie rush in to help, only to find Rune is missing. As the plot zigs and zags, readers will enjoy hanging out with Tom and Allie, whose quirkiness will remind some readers of Janey Mack’s Maisie McGrane. Agent: Victoria Skurnick, Levine Greenberg Literary Agency.

    • Kirkus

      March 1, 2017
      Meeting the right guy makes a divorcee feel like she's won the lottery--that is, until it turns out he's won the lottery and she learns the extent which people will go to get their hands on the cash.Never did Allie Harper think doing a simple kindness would get her into so much trouble, but that's exactly what happens when she stops to help a blind pedestrian struggling to get through a busy Cleveland intersection. The man himself, Thomas Bennington III, is no trouble at all, easy on the eyes and all that. He's so nice, in fact, that Allie invites him back to her little apartment so they can get to know each other better. It's what Tom has on his person that puts them both in peril: the winning ticket for the MondoMegaJackpot, worth some $550 million. Tom explains that he's not a gambling man but a college professor who bought the ticket to demonstrate to his young neighbor the folly of gambling. Though neither Tom nor Allie is particularly interested in the prize now that they've found each other, they may be the only two people in the city who aren't, as they soon discover through the series of break-ins, ransackings, kidnappings, and even homicides that follow. Too many bodies to count keep Tom and Allie on the run while trying to hold onto the ticket through a chase in which everyone in Cleveland seems to be after them. Cheesy dialogue between the newly minted couple interspersed with an endless series of threats to their lives make the lottery win in Hogsett's debut seem more like a death sentence than a boon.

      COPYRIGHT(2017) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

    • Library Journal

      Starred review from April 1, 2017

      Lonely, divorced Allie Harper comes to the rescue of a handsome blind man caught in the crosswalk after he's startled by the honking of a Hummer on a Cleveland street. She drags Thomas Bennington III home, makes dinner, and is enjoying his company when he learns he's won over $500 million on a lottery ticket. Yet a downcast Tom had bought the ticket to prove to a young boy that gambling doesn't pay off. Unfortunately, too many people know he won and think they deserve a share of the money. The couple get to know each other quite well as they go on the run and do everything they can to stay alive, while the people around them end up dead. VERDICT In this entertaining, sexy debut, Allie is a sharp Stephanie Plum paired up with a hot partner. She quickly learns how adept a blind man can be in dealing with trouble. The original voice, humor, and unusual premise will appeal to Janet Evanovich readers.--LH

      Copyright 2017 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

    • Booklist

      April 1, 2017
      Divorced and down on her luck, Allie Harper rescues a blind man, Thomas Bennington III, who is about to be run over by a woman in a Hummer, and they form an instant connection. That evening, while having dinner with Allie, Bennington learns he has won the Mondo jackpot of $550 milliona real problem since he only bought the ticket to convince his young friend, Rune, of the futility of playing the lottery. As soon as the news is out, both of their houses are ransacked, Allie's landlady is assaulted, and the bodies begin to pile up as Cleveland's criminal element works to find and steal the ticket. The two begin to investigate to protect themselves, hiding in hotels while keeping tabs on Rune. When the killer makes a final desperate play for the money, the two make a choice that may cost them their lives. Fast pacing, multiple plot twists, and humor, including a Stephanie Plumlike main character, enliven the story and keep the pages turning.(Reprinted with permission of Booklist, copyright 2017, American Library Association.)

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  • English

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