Praise for Rena Pederson "Writing a biography of a living legend is never easy, especially when the living legend is legendarily inaccessible. A fascinating biography."-- "The Dallas Morning News" "An ambitious and necessary work."-- "The Cleveland Plain Dealer"
"A simply riveting whodunit--dramatic, thrilling and sometimes hilarious, as a daring cat burglar in the 1960s outwits the cops and plunders the wealthiest mansions of Dallas and Fort Worth, Texas. Perhaps what's most amazing is that the story is all true. The veteran journalist Rena Pederson takes us on a wild ride through that now almost forgotten era. After years of research, she also identifies who could have been the King of Diamonds. Pederson has produced a true crime tour de force."--Skip Hollandsworth, author of The Midnight Assassin and executive editor at Texas Monthly
"This book is irresistible, not just because of the waves of suspense and surprise it so expertly surfs, but because it's such an authoritative summoning of Dallas's crazy Gilded Age. Rena Pederson is a relentless reporter but such a storyteller that you feel that she's spinning out this can-you-believe-it tale from a cozy booth at the Cipango Club."--Stephen Harrigan, New York Times bestselling author of The Gates of the Alamo, and of Big Wonderful Thing: A History of Texas
"Dallas has long promoted an image of pious country clubbers with big cars and big hair. But the city also has been home to a groaning underbelly of thieves, hustlers, racketeers, and other assorted felons. With King of Diamonds, Rena Pederson has joined these two worlds, and she has done so with verve, style, and astonishing historical detail. Going back decades, she cracks open a long-forgotten vault of amazing cat-burglar grabs and incredible escapades. When it comes to high-dollar jewelry heists, this book is pure gold." -- "Doug J. Swanson, author of Blood Aces: The Wild Ride of of Benny Binion, the Texas Gangster Who Created Vegas Poker"
"King of Diamonds is an enjoyable read, in large measure because of Pederson's extensive, high-quality research, obtaining compelling info from and about her subjects. Pederson interviewed more than 200 cops, victims and neighbors. The result is as much a sociology study of upper-crust Dallas society as a true crime story, enlivened by her sprightly writing style"--The Star Tribune
"Perfect for true-crime lovers who want a story about sinister thefts that aims to uncover the psychological motivations behind some sensational crimes. Award-winning journalist Pederson sets out to find the identity of the King of Diamonds, uncovering well-kept Dallas secrets and answering some of the most puzzling questions. Her investigation is easy to follow as she takes readers down her research rabbit hole of this real-life whodunit and her conclusions."--Library Journal
"This riveting investigation from Pederson probes a series of unsolved Texas jewel thefts from the 1950s and '60s. With a novelist's gift for description and a detective's keen eye for evidence, Pederson considers suspects ranging from gigolos to interior designers and jewelers. It's a pleasure to watch her cross them off her list one by one until she resurrects a convincing theory that the case's original investigators were unable to pursue. This is a must-read for any true crime buff." --Publishers Weekly (starred review)
"In classic cop-speak, the bold, agile perp had a practiced M.O., or modus operandi. He was promptly crowned 'The King of Diamonds.' That's also the title of Rena Pederson's saga of the master thief's rampage. Deeply researched and fluidly written. It's quite a yarn."--The Wall Street Journal
"As Cary Grant remarks in To Catch a Thief, 'I never stole from anybody who would go hungry.' Rena Pederson uses that line as the opening epigraph of her intriguing and highly readable thriller The King of Diamonds. Pederson's writing is at its sharpest when she says of one fellow that "he was the kind of man who looked as if he slept in a tuxedo and, some evenings, did."--Alexander Larman, The Washington Examiner