Once again Jesse Sublett proves that the Lone Star State's capital lives up to its mantra: Keep Austin weird. Enjoy this romp back in time to the era when Ronnie Earle ruled at the courthouse and Frank Smith in the salvage business.— Kathryn Casey, best-selling author of In Plain Sight: The Kaufman County Prosecutor MurdersA rookie district attorney. A wily, backslapping multimillionaire bail bondsman. And one of the biggest criminal investigations in Austin history. Jesse Sublett's book is both a riveting crime story and a character-rich study of Austin, Texas. It's smartly crafted and excellently researched.— Skip Hollandsworth, author of The Midnight Assassin: The Hunt for America's First Serial KillerJesse Sublett is a first-rate writer and researcher. Once again, he dives deep, exposing the creeps and bottom feeders of Austin's criminal past to create an engrossing portrait of district attorney Ronnie Earle at the dawn of his long and legendary career. Last Gangster in Austin is a great read.— W.K. Kip Stratton, author of The Wild Bunch: Sam Peckinpah, a Revolution in Hollywood, and the Making of a Legendary FilmA vividly detailed and stylishly written portrait of an Austin long gone by.— KirkusTake a nostalgic trip back in time to the Austin of the 1970s in this gripping account of corrupt leadership, crime, power, and Texas-sized personalities.— Austin Monthly[Last Gangster in Austin] is one of the most egregiously Texas stories, nay, one of the most remarkably Austin stories one could read...fantastic, an often wildly entertaining look at Austin when it really was a bit of an outlaw place.— Joe Gross, Austin ChronicleHere's a true-crime story that's every bit as compelling as your favorite pulpy, fictional counterpart...It's a tale replete with genuine heroes, repellent villains, and a slew of supporting characters any self-respecting crime novelist would be proud to have created on the page...Sublett constructs the story with a sharp eye and a hard-boiled flair.— Jay Trachtenberg, Austin ChronicleIf you pick up just one new Texas history this summer, make it Last Gangster in Austin...Sublett's riveting true-crime story reads like a classic noir novel.— Austin American-Statesman