John Dillinger's reign as Public Enemy No. 1 began in the summer of 1933, when he left the Commercial Bank of Daleville, Indiana, with $3,500 and a diamond ring belonging to the bank president's daughter. It was the depth of the Depression. Banks were closing everywhere, and millions of Americans were losing their life savings. To them, Dillinger's act made him a sort of hero, even a modern-day Robin Hood. Within the next year, he would go on to rob ten banks and break out of two jails, one of them theoretically "escape-proof...Many a man fell on both sides in the effort to capture-and keep imprisoned-the incorrigible Johnnie D."


Genre: Historical

Praise for this book

"As exciting as a bank heist, movind with the speed of Dillinger's Ford V-8." - Loren D Estleman


Used availability for Arthur Winfield Knight's Johnnie D


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