Many writers bill themselves as noir, but if you want to experience what the word truly means, in its finest expression, then pick up That Left Turn at Albuquerque, a brutally funny, wickedly clever nightmare that heralds the triumphant return of Scott Phillips, the twenty-first century's greatest purveyor of crime fiction. Blake Crouch, author of Recursion and the Wayward Pines trilogy
In That Left Turn at Albuquerque, Phillips displays a master alchemist s touch. No one blends the elements of happenstance, malevolence, unintended consequences, irony and humor into crime fiction magic like Phillips. No one! Reed Farrel Coleman, New York Times bestselling author of What You Break
A hilarious, twisty, dark, and profane romp deep into a modern noir world. The people in a Scott Phillips novel are so damn authentic, they remind me of folks I met while covering the crime beat. Phillips proves once again why he's one of the best crime writers out there. Ace Atkins, New York Times bestselling author of The Shameless
"The cover of St. Louis writer Scott Phillips That Left Turn at Albuquerque shows a parked sports car gleaming in the sunshine. But behind that sunny cover looms a dark story a noir tale, acted out by some shady souls." St. Louis Today
"The one persistent problem with reading a Scott Phillips novel is you can never figure out who you re supposed to root for. You meet a series of engaging characters, all of them relatable -- and then you realize they re all liars, cheats and maybe worse." The Oregonian
Phillips is the real deal . . . Noir and black comedy have always been kissin cousins, but here they re locked in a torrid embrace. Booklist Praise for Scott Phillips
Funny, craftily malevolent . . . An ice-pick-sharp crime story that sustains its film-noir energy all the way to an outrageous whammy of an ending. The New York Times
[The author] has a way of writing a bon vivant of the Wild West with testosterone raging without it appearing macho or obnoxious or egocentric . . . It is a joy to read Phillips. Huffington Post
Taut and vicious . . . The essence of noir. Los Angeles Times
Phillips is dark, dangerous, and important . . . Crime fiction at its best. Michael Connelly The unparalleled master of the noir anti-hero. Megan Abbott
One of the most original practitioners of noir working today. Spinetingler Magazine
Scott Phillips is a screenwriter, photographer and the author of seven novels and numerous short stories. His bestselling debut novel, The Ice Harvest, was a New York Times Notable Book and was adapted as a major motion picture starring John Cusack and Billy Bob Thornton. He won the California Book Award and was a finalist for the Edgar Award, the Hammett Prize, and the CWA Gold Dagger Award. Scott was born and raised in Wichita, Kansas, and lived for many years in France. He now lives with his wife and daughter in St. Louis, Missouri.