The Beggar's Bowl Audiolibro Por Gerald Dean Rice arte de portada

The Beggar's Bowl

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The Beggar's Bowl

De: Gerald Dean Rice
Narrado por: Maggie Weber
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DeGere is a thief. But stealing has become much too easy for the man of many masks who bides his time between jobs seducing local women into stealing for him. His fence, Manson, gets all the details of his latest conquest, all the while questioning if the stories the thief tells are true. But then the two find out how very dangerous lies can be.

©2011, 2025 Red Hand Books (P)2025 Red Hand Books
Ficción y Crimen Horror
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I found DeGere to be fascinating. A thief with many personas and accents but one thing was constant… his love for the conquest of the ladies. The last paramour who he left without a goodbye found him. The ending was wild.

This is a short story and I was able to finish it in less than 30 minutes. I enjoyed it.

This is the second book I’ve read by the author and enjoyed both.

My jaw dropped

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El oyente recibió este título gratis

There’s something quietly compelling about stories that don’t overstay their welcome. The Beggar’s Bowl by Gerald Dean Rice is one of those reads—a compact crime vignette that delivers atmosphere, character, and tension in just a handful of pages.
This is not a novel you sink into for hours. Instead, it’s a story you slip into, linger with, and then find yourself thinking about long after it ends.
A Thief at the Center
At the heart of The Beggar’s Bowl is DeGere, a thief who survives as much on his storytelling as on his skill. He’s charming, slippery, and deeply unreliable—a man who understands that perception can be just as valuable as truth. Through conversations and encounters—particularly with his fence, Manson—the cracks in DeGere’s carefully crafted persona begin to show.
Rice doesn’t rely on elaborate plotting here. Instead, the story unfolds through character interaction and implication, letting tension simmer beneath seemingly casual exchanges. The result feels intimate and faintly unsettling, like listening to someone talk themselves into a corner.
Style and Pacing
Rice’s prose is clean and efficient, well suited to the story’s brevity. Dialogue does much of the heavy lifting, revealing character and conflict without excessive exposition. The pacing is brisk but intentional—nothing feels rushed, yet nothing lingers too long.
Because the story is so short, readers looking for complex world-building or layered subplots may find it sparse. But for a piece designed as a snapshot rather than a saga, the restraint works in its favor.

Wonderful short stoyr

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