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The Prop: A Novel

The Prop: A NovelAuthor: Pete Hautman
Publisher: Simon & Schuster

List Price: $21.95
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Rating: 3.5 out of 5 stars 7 reviews
Sales Rank: 1,251,922

Media: Paperback
Edition: Original
Pages: 320
Number Of Items: 1
Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.9
Dimensions (in): 8.5 x 5.4 x 0.9

ISBN: 0743284658
Dewey Decimal Number: 813.54
EAN: 9780743284653
ASIN: 0743284658

Publication Date: March 28, 2006
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days

Editorial Reviews:

Product Description
National Book Award winner Pete Hautman delivers a fast-paced mystery set in the torrid, unforgiving Southwestern desert, where the stakes are sky high and all bets are off.

Peeky Kane is a prop player at an Arizona casino owned by the Santa Cruz tribe. Her job is to play poker. She makes a handsome living off the suckers who populate the card room. Life is sweet.

But something's not right at Casino Santa Cruz. When Peeky inadvertently finds herself in a fixed game and comes away a couple thousand dollars richer, she finds herself drawn unwittingly toward the dark side of professional poker. Peeky has always thought of herself as a straight shooter, but now things aren't so clear. And they're about to get a lot murkier.

When a band of clown-masked robbers makes off with millions of the casino's dollars and leaves behind four corpses, Peeky recognizes one of the robbers as a casino employee, and fears that one of her closest loved ones might also be involved. That same day, Peeky's son-in-law turns up to tell her that Jaymie, her beloved daughter, has been stealing money from Peeky for years to feed a crack habit.

Numb from these revelations, Peeky is compelled to action by an unlikely source when the most powerful member of the Santa Cruz tribe calls upon her to help him save his troubled casino. Peeky must draw on her years of reading poker faces and playing the odds to save the casino, her daughter, and herself.


Customer Reviews:
Showing reviews 1-5 of 7



4 out of 5 stars Good mystery, although too much poker for me   January 12, 2009
Bort (North Dakota, CA USA)
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.



4 out of 5 stars Hang On - This is a Good One!   October 25, 2006
John R. Linnell (New Gloucester, ME United States)
2 out of 2 found this review helpful

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.



1 out of 5 stars Not worth the time!   August 19, 2006
Generous Mom (Pennsylvania)
0 out of 4 found this review helpful

This is the first book by this author that I've read and I won't waste my time with another of his "mysteries". There was NO mystery in this book. There was no real direction to the story. It seems that Hautman added numerous filler stories because his main concept was so weak. The characters were barely believable and incredibly stupid. The main character was so pathetic. Hautman has no idea how to write a woman's character. This story seems to have been written for an adult market in a child-like fashion. It had no twists or turns in the plot and the ending just stopped. You know when you read a really good novel and you have that feeling of contentment, like you were glad you took the time to read the book. Well, after reading "THE PROP", I felt like I wasted my time. The book got tossed it into the trash where it belonged. Reading should be fun and entertaining - this book didn't come close to being fun or entertaining.


4 out of 5 stars A pro   July 3, 2006
John Bowes (Oxford, MA USA)
0 out of 1 found this review helpful

The author holds your interest effortlessly. Well written, populated by interesting characters, and an author to look for. A summer dream.


3 out of 5 stars Not up to Hautman's standards   May 8, 2006
Dave Schwinghammer (Little Falls, Minnesota USA)
2 out of 4 found this review helpful

In THE PROP, Pete Hautman spurns his usual Minnesota setting for Arizona. Also gone are the Fargo-esque characters, Joe Crow and Sam O'Gara. Poker also takes on a prominent role here; whereas usually it's only mentioned referentially.

The main character here is also a woman, "Peeky" Kane, who works as a "prop" at an Indian gaming casino. A prop is a player employed by the casino to fill in when there aren't enough players.

The action starts when Peeky becomes unintentionally involved in a cheating scam, then is witness to a casino holdup. A subplot involves Peeky's daughter who's addicted to crack cocaine.

Patricia "Peeky" Kane is a very likable character. Hautman does a nice job with a woman's voice. When she's feeling stressed, she turns to Cherry Garcia ice cream and Vouvray (wine). She keeps thousands of dollars hidden away in shoe boxes and cookie jars. Cisco, the Santa Cruz elder who founded the casino, is also very well drawn. We're not quite sure the Santa Cruz indians ever existed; yet Cisco is able to convince the government to give him land upon which to build his casino.

The subplot involving the daughter gets old after awhile; Peeky and her son-in-law, Eduardo, whom she calls "The Black Prince," keep trying to save Jaymie, the daughter, from herself, but she keeps running away. The secondary characters also leave something to be desired. Jaymie is a stereotype; Eduado doesn't do much except fight, and Peeky's lover, Buddy, just isn't believable. I would imagine Hautman wrote this because of the popularity of Holdem poker on TV, but I think he would have been better served if he'd stayed with his tried and true characters, some of whom have played poker professionally.


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