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The Many Deaths of the Firefly Brothers: A Novel Hardcover – January 26, 2010
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In award-winning author Thomas Mullen’s evocative new novel, the highly anticipated follow-up to his acclaimed debut, The Last Town on Earth, we follow the Depression-era adventures of Jason and Whit Fireson—bank robbers known as the Firefly Brothers by the press, the authorities, and an adoring public that worships their acts as heroic counterpunches thrown at a broken system.
Now it appears they have at last met their end in a hail of bullets. Jason and Whit’s lovers—Darcy, a wealthy socialite, and Veronica, a hardened survivor—struggle between grief and an unyielding belief that the Firesons have survived. While they and the Firesons’ stunned mother and straight-arrow third son wade through conflicting police reports and press accounts, wild rumors spread that the bandits are still at large. Through it all, the Firefly Brothers remain as charismatic, unflappable, and as mythical as the American Dream itself, racing to find the women they love and make sense of a world in which all has come unmoored.
Complete with kidnappings and gangsters, heiresses and speakeasies, The Many Deaths of the Firefly Brothers is an imaginative and spirited saga about what happens when you are hopelessly outgunned—and a masterly tale of hardship, redemption, and love that transcends death.
- Print length416 pages
- LanguageEnglish
- PublisherRandom House
- Publication dateJanuary 26, 2010
- Dimensions6.25 x 1.31 x 9.57 inches
- ISBN-101400067537
- ISBN-13978-1400067534
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Review
"The Many Deaths of the Firefly Brothers is an ambitious and big-hearted book, as lively and full of surprises as the Brothers themselves. The Depression-era world that Mullen conjures in its pages is satisfyingly real-and startlingly reminiscent of the America we inhabit today."—Jon Clinch, author of Finn
"Thomas Mullen’s obvious intelligence and soaring imagination have come together to create this remarkable mythic tale. The Many Deaths of the Firefly Brothers is a story that reminds us that adventure, heroism, magic, and love can survive—and, in fact, thrive—in times of economic collapse and harrowing social uncertainty." —Dean Bakopoulos, author of Please Don’t Come Back from the Moon
"If there’s any justice in the world, Thomas Mullen’s searing, thrilling novel will have as many lives as the Firefly Brothers. It’s a thoughtful exploration of celebrity worship and the border country between lore and despair; it’s also a crackling good yarn that never loses its getaway-car momentum. This is gangster fiction for grownups—from a writer who brings history vividly and bruisingly to life." —Louis Bayard, author of The Black Tower
"Fast-talking gents with gats, swell dames falling for the wrong fellas, car chases and hideouts in a depression-era America desperate for a new Robin Hood, this novel has the goods. In The Many Deaths of the Firefly Brothers, Thomas Mullen puts a magical twist on a classic tale to give us just the right book for hard times. Read this book, see."—Keith Donohue, author of The Stolen Child
"A rip-roaring yarn that manages to be both phantasmagorical and historically accurate. In its labyrinthine, luminous narrative, reminiscent of Michael Chabon’s best fiction, readers will find powerful parallels to the present-day…a stunning work of fiction that is intense, deeply satisfying and always uniquely American."—Los Angeles Times / The Chicago Tribune
"Mullen follows up his acclaimed debut novel, The Last Town on Earth, with amysterious and compelling romp through the 1930s when the FBI was out to make a name for itself and the world was full of poverty and discontent."—Associated Press
"A full-throttle page-turner…smartly written…a kind of graphic-novel historical fiction, where sharply drawn two-dimensional characters are superimposed on an almost photo-realistic background…Like Michael Chabon, whose Amazing Adventures of Kavalier and Clay is brought to mind by The Many Deaths of the Firefly Brothers’ high-wire balance of historical fiction and pulp fantasy, Mullen is equally adept at illuminating and exploiting his readers’ familiarity with pop culture tropes…Mullen knows his stuff."—The Toronto Star
"A magical and imaginative portrait of Great Depression-era America…Mullen gracefully interweaves themes of justice, mortality, and fame."—Atlanta Magazine
"If The Many Deaths of the Firefly Brothers were a woman, I’d ask her to marry me. Every so often I stumble across a read so mesmerizing, it makes me forget about my other literary loves. Thomas Mullen’s latest is just such a read…provocative… immersive…memorable…Firefly leapfrogs its contemporaries. Hands down, this is one heart-pounding work of fiction you shouldn’t overlook."—The Free Lance-Star, Fredericksburg, VA
"Compelling…Mullen makes the despair of the Great Depression palpable, as his antiheroes become folk icons to the downtrodden people of the Midwest resentful of a government that can't help them."—Publishers Weekly, starred
About the Author
Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved.
He was a man well accustomed to waking up in unorthodox positions and in all manner of settings. He’d slept on floors, in the pillowless crevices of old couch frames, amid the nettles of haylofts, against the steering wheels of parked cars. Whether it was stationary or in motion, Jason Fireson could sleep on it: he’d snoozed on buses, phaetons, boxcars. He’d nodded off standing up, sitting down, falling over.
But this was something new.
He didn’t know what he was lying on at first. He knew only that he was cold, that his skin was touching metal, and that he was naked. A thin sheet was pulled halfway up his chest.
He had suffered more than his share of automobile accidents and he was familiar with the awful feeling the following mornings. This was worse. He sat up gradually, the muscles and tendons of his neck and arms achingly stiff. He thought that it would have been difficult to imagine being any more sore without being dead.
He inhaled. He was accustomed as well to waking to all nature of scents—to animals in the barn below, or unwashed criminals sweating in a cramped room, or Darcy’s occasional and disastrous breakfasts. But this was a strange, bitter vapor trying in vain to mask more human evidence of body odor, urine, and blood. The room was brightly lit, two overhead lights and desk lamps on either side casting their jaundiced glow. He looked to his left and saw cruel medical implements lying on a narrow metal table, some of them wrapped in gauze or cloth and all of them lying in a pool of dried blood. A hospital room, then. He’d never woken up in one of those before, so add that to the list. It was an unusual hospital, and his eyes took stock of the various items his physicians had left behind. On the same table as those grisly tools was a camera and its tall flash, an empty pack of cigarettes, and an overflowing ashtray.
One of the lamps flickered on and off every few seconds. Heavy footsteps followed invisible paths above the ceiling. He could taste the memory of blood in the back of his throat, and when he swallowed he nearly gagged at the dryness.
The tiled floor was filthy, as if his physicians moonlighted as hog farmers and had tracked mud throughout the sick ward. Ringing the room at waist level was a narrow counter, and in the corner a large radio was precariously balanced on it, the announcer’s smooth voice earnestly recounting the latest WPA project. Most alarming was the policeman’s cap hanging from a hook on the back of a door, framed photographs of unsmiling officers haunting three different walls, and, on the wall behind his bed, the portrait of what Jason figured for a governor—guys with jowls like that just had to be governors—glaring at him like a corpulent god.
He noticed that the fingertips of his left hand were blackened with ink, those five blotches the very picture of guilt, of shame, and some very unfortunate luck indeed.
At the far end of the room a similarly unclothed, half-covered man lay on a cot, pushed up against the wall as if trying to keep as far from Jason Fireson as possible.
Then Jason noticed that it wasn’t a cot.
He lifted himself from elbows to palms, the sheet slipping down to his waist. His eyes widened at the grotesque marks on his chest. They looked like boils that had been lanced with dirty scalpels and had become infected, drying out crusted and black as they sank back into his flesh. Two were in his upper chest just beneath his clavicle, another was a couple of inches southeast of his left nipple, and three more were in his abdomen. Jason had always been proud of his physique, and for a moment—a brief one—his thoughts ran to profound disappointment at the way these wounds marred his well-proportioned pectorals and flat stomach. But he had been shot before—months ago, in his left forearm—and he knew the markings for what they were, even as all rational thought argued the contrary.
In a panic he tore the sheet off his body and let it collapse like a dispelled ghost onto the tiled floor. He wanted to touch the wounds but was afraid to.
“Well this is a hell of a thing.”
He sat there for a moment, then forced his neck to scan the room again. Objects that before had been fuzzy declared themselves. To his right was a third cooling board, which had been obscured from view by a table between them. He thought he knew the face lying in profile upon it—how could he not?—except for the fact that he’d never seen his brother look so peaceful.
Jason stood, the tile cold on his feet, and stared wide-eyed at Whit. He reached forward and hesitantly touched his brother’s stubbly left cheek. It felt cold, but everything felt cold at that moment. He grabbed the sheet that lay up to his brother’s neck, waited a moment, and slowly began to pull it down. In the center of Whit’s chest, like a target, was what could only be a bullet wound.
As he took in this sight he breathed slowly—yes, he was breathing, despite all the metal he must be carrying inside, clanging about like a piggy bank—and leaned forward in grief, involuntarily putting his right hand on his brother’s biceps. It flexed into alertness, and Whit’s head turned toward Jason. Whit’s jaw was clenched and his brows quivered. Then his eyes darted down.
“You’re naked,” Whit said.
“That hardly seems the most noteworthy thing here.” Their voices were hoarse.
Whit sat up, still staring at Jason’s pockmarked chest. Eventually his eyes shifted down to his own body, and he lurched back as if shot again, nearly falling from his cooling board.
“What . . . ?” His voice trailed off.
“I don’t know.”
They stared at each other for a long while, each waiting for the other to explain the situation or to bust up at the practical joke.
Jason swallowed, which hurt, and said, “For the sake of discussion I’m at least going to ask if this has ever happened to you before.”
“Not in my worst dreams.”
“I thought you never remember your dreams.”
“Well, I would think I’d remember something like this!”
“Shh. We’re in a police station, for Chrissake.”
Whit hopped off his cooling board. “Do you remember anything?”
“No.” Jason reversed down his mental map, wildly careening through each turn and over every bump. “I remember being in Detroit, I remember driving with the money to meet with Owney. . . . But that’s it. I don’t remember if we even made it to the restaurant.”
“Me neither. Everything’s all fuzzy.”
Jason felt a sudden need to look back at his own cooling board, in case he was a spirit and had left his husk behind. But no.
Whit started glancing around the room again as if searching for a perfectly rational explanation. Maybe these weren’t bullet wounds but something else.
“How could we . . .” he tried to ask. “How could we have survived this?”
“I don’t know. We’ve survived a lot so far, so why not—”
Whit pointed to his wound. “Look at this, Jason!”
“Shhh. Keep it down, goddamnit. And, no thank you, I’ve looked at it enough.”
Whit turned around. “Where’s the exit wound? Do you think it could have managed to slip out and miss the major organs?”
Jason waved him off without looking. “What about all of mine?”
Whit turned back around and briefly examined his brother’s chest. “I don’t know, maybe they . . .” Then he looked at Jason’s face. “You’re white as a sheet, too.”
Jason lightly slapped his own face. “I’ll get some color once we get out of here. C’mon, let’s figure a way out.”
Whit tapped at his chest. Then he closed his eyes for a moment, opened them. “I don’t feel dead.”
“Thank you for clarifying that.”
“But, I mean, I’m breathing. Are you breathing? How do you feel?”
“I feel stiff but . . . normal.” Indeed, Jason was feeling less sore the more he moved, as if all that his joints needed was to be released from their locked positions. “Shockingly normal. You?”
Whit nodded. “But if we’ve survived this and have been recovering here for a few hours, or days, shouldn’t we . . . feel a little worse?”
“I don’t know, maybe we’re on some crazy medication. Or maybe they used some new kind of bullets. Who knows? Look, a police station isn’t the place to be wondering about this. We don’t have time.”
Jason turned off the radio. A closer inspection of the police hat on the wall informed him that they were in Points North, Indiana. He told Whit.
“Where the hell is Points North?”
“Not far from Valparaiso,” Jason said. The plan had been to pick up the girls at a motel outside Valparaiso after the cash drop-off in Detroit. So had the drop-off been successful, only to have something go wrong when they tried to get the girls?
Jason motioned to the third cooling board at the other end of the room. “Come on, let’s see who our accomplice is. Maybe he has some answers.”
He walked over to the body, Whit following after bunching his sheet around his waist. The man on the third board was every bit as naked under his sheet and every bit as bad off. He was big, once inflated but now sagging, and a gunshot to the left side of his neck had not only left a large wound but had torn at the loose skin, shreds hanging there. The crooked bridge of his nose boasted that he&rs...
Product details
- Publisher : Random House; First Edition (January 26, 2010)
- Language : English
- Hardcover : 416 pages
- ISBN-10 : 1400067537
- ISBN-13 : 978-1400067534
- Item Weight : 1.35 pounds
- Dimensions : 6.25 x 1.31 x 9.57 inches
- Best Sellers Rank: #2,701,325 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
- #1,123,062 in Literature & Fiction (Books)
- Customer Reviews:
About the author

Thomas Mullen is the author of Darktown, an NPR Best Book of the Year, which has been shortlisted for the Los Angeles Times Book Prize, the Southern Book Prize, the Indies Choice Book Award, has been nominated for two Crime Writers Association Dagger Awards, and is being developed for television by Sony Pictures with executive producer Jamie Foxx; The Last Town on Earth, which was named Best Debut Novel of 2006 by USA Today and was awarded the James Fenimore Cooper Prize for excellence in historical fiction; The Many Deaths of the Firefly Brothers; and The Revisionists. He lives in Atlanta with his wife and sons.
Customer reviews
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Learn more how customers reviews work on AmazonCustomers say
Customers find the book to be a good read with an interesting premise. The story moves quickly, with one customer noting how the family background evolves slowly.
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Customers find the book to be a good read.
"I love this book, and I didn't want it to end. Others here have given a glimpse into the plot, so I'll just say the writing is wonderful...." Read more
"It is a weird but good book. The story moves quickly although some of the flashbacks are a little confusing...." Read more
"...Definitely worth the listen. From a time when things were tough and people did extraordinary things to get by." Read more
"Interesting read, enjoyed the era..." Read more
Customers enjoy the story pace of the book, finding it interesting and moving quickly. One customer notes how the family background evolves slowly, while another appreciates the different approach to storytelling.
"...The story of the family background evolves slowly and is critical to the story...." Read more
"It is a weird but good book. The story moves quickly although some of the flashbacks are a little confusing...." Read more
"...Once you get beyond the unbelieveability of the premise, the story is quite interesting and deep. Definitely worth the listen...." Read more
"Fairly interesting beginning, thought I might have found a story to eat up some winter hours...." Read more
Top reviews from the United States
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- Reviewed in the United States on February 5, 2010The author's depiction of the 1930's is too real to be comfortable. I was alive during that period, and the author describes the hopelessness and misery of those times as they really were. There were no jobs; some families lived in tents out in the country or vacant lots, and hobo parks were common. There was no welfare, and most people lived wretched lives.
Against this background the author writes about the adventures of Jason Fireston and his brother Whitson, 2 desperadoes in desperate times living their own code of law. The story line is so original I could never imagine where it was going. As the story develops one learns about the family dynamics of the brothers with each other (there is a 3d brother who is a straight arrow) and how each of them became who he is. The story of the family background evolves slowly and is critical to the story. Circumstances and individual beliefs shape the brothers' destinies.
I could not put this book down until my husband ordered me to turn out the lights. I am recommending it to all of my friends and to book clubs. Amelia Koenig
- Reviewed in the United States on December 31, 2021Was great at taking me to a bygone era, I time I couldn't even fathom trying to live in. The book itself d finitely dragged at times, but I still enjoyed it. Shave about 60 pages and it would of been perfect
- Reviewed in the United States on October 4, 2011I kept waiting for something big to happen throughout the book and it just never did. If a book does not grab me by the time I am half way through, it is just a waste of my time althought I forced myself to finish because it was a book club read. Still would rather have read a book that was more of a page turner. To me, this was not.
- Reviewed in the United States on March 14, 2018I love this book, and I didn't want it to end. Others here have given a glimpse into the plot, so I'll just say the writing is wonderful. It should be a movie with the Affleck brothers as the Firefly brothers, or possibly Banshee's Antony Starr as Jason Fireson and Colin Farrell as Whit Fireson.
- Reviewed in the United States on April 25, 2015It is a weird but good book. The story moves quickly although some of the flashbacks are a little confusing. The story fits into the 1930s period in the United States.
- Reviewed in the United States on April 27, 2010Author's approach to story telling is really different. Interesting premise. Once you get beyond the unbelieveability of the premise, the story is quite interesting and deep. Definitely worth the listen. From a time when things were tough and people did extraordinary things to get by.
- Reviewed in the United States on July 22, 2015This tells the story of Jason & Whit Fireson, Depression-era bank robbers who, through their infamy & the press coverage of their crime sprees, get the nickname Firefly Bros. You can just picture some reporter saying "eh... has a better ring to it". After one particular job goes especially wrong, they find themselves waking up in a morgue, not remembering how they got there. Did they really die and come back to life, or is it all some kind of joke someone is playing on them? The brothers go on to have multiple incidents of what seems to be reincarnation. They can't explain it, all they can do is wonder -- if it is an otherworldly gift -- why was it bestowed on them?
Honestly, I was a little bummed with this one. It started out pretty great -- the story concept was pretty cool and I liked the snarky banter between the brothers. There was also some good introspective bits about how the brothers' life choices affected everyone around them, the reprecussions of being acquainted with the Fireson boys. I was thinking I was in for something sort of Supernatural-esque here! But it didn't take long for it to start fizzling out for me.
It didn't feel as magical as I was hoping, and some of the descriptions started to run pretty long for my tastes. There was a lot of hiding, waiting, and reflecting that reminded me of reading Ned Kelly by Robert Drewe (another one I liked initially but got bogged down with slow, boring passages). And why were these guys SO bad at dodging bullets? Were they supposed to be immortal AND magnetic? It got laughable after awhile!
The ending to this novel felt like the author was drawing a blank on a strong ending so just went with "I leave it to you reader." More often than not, this kind of closing irks the bananas out of me. This one won't be staying on my shelves...better luck to the next reader.
- Reviewed in the United States on November 26, 2010I found the many deaths of the firefly book to be OK. it doesn't flow very well. the authors debut novel is a much easier read. there are too many parts in firefly that skip and your left wondering what happened.
the book is broken down in the the 3 deaths of the firefly brothers. i kept wondering how could anyone end up in a morgue 3 times with bullet holes and not die many times? it's a bit far fetched.
Top reviews from other countries
- LReviewed in the United Kingdom on June 16, 2019
5.0 out of 5 stars Very interesting story
Very gripping book, quite fast paced with an interesting story.
- EarlReviewed in Canada on December 16, 2020
1.0 out of 5 stars Earl
Pathetic. A ridiculous story.
- Steven P.Reviewed in the United Kingdom on April 5, 2019
4.0 out of 5 stars Good read but a tad too long
Thomas Mullen is a great author and I've read many of his books. This one, whilst very enjoyable, is around 50 pages too long but nonetheless a worthy purchase
- Ted AnxiousReviewed in the United Kingdom on May 6, 2017
3.0 out of 5 stars Not bad but not that good either
This was an ok read. The prose is not great and the metaphors and similes were not convincing.
The basic premise was interesting but didn't actually go anywhere - we were left to decide for ourselves in the end what it was all about.
I won't read any more Thomas Mullen books.
- johnsowterReviewed in the United Kingdom on July 14, 2017
2.0 out of 5 stars No
Right load of bollocks to be honest