Skip to product information
1 of 1

Nina, the Bandit Queen

Publisher:

Regular price $21.99
Regular price $0.00 Sale price $21.99
Sold out
Nina Dolgoy is a self-proclaimed "welfare queen" who leads her neighbours on a campaign to renovate the community pool, only to prove the sad old adage that no good deed ever goes unpunished. Given...
Read More
  • 27 March 2012
View Product Details

Nina Dolgoy leads her neighbours on a campaign to renovate the community pool, but the only way she can think to raise money is to rob a bank. Unfortunately, she isn’t very good at it.

In a part of town so beaten down that even prostitutes and drug dealers have written if off, Nina Dolgoy imagines that if the local pool wasn’t boarded up, her little daughters could use it to burn off their wayward energy and avoid falling into utter degradation. So the bitterly self-proclaimed "welfare queen" leads her neighbours on a fundraising, pool-fixing community-improvement campaign that proves the sad old adage that no good deed ever goes unpunished.

The only way Nina can think to raise money herself is by robbing a bank. Unfortunately, she isn’t very good at it. Coincidentally, her brother, Frank, gets out of jail and robs one.

The explosive events that are unleashed force Nina and the girls to flee for their lives, but their escape turns into a sublimely bizarre chase during which Nina somehow needs to pull the wool over everybody’s eyes.

files/i.png Icon
Price: $21.99
Pages: 272
Publisher: Dundurn Press
Imprint: Dundurn Press
Publication Date: 27 March 2012
Trim Size: 8.50 X 5.50 in
ISBN: 9781459701380
Format: Paperback
BISACs: FICTION / Humorous, Humorous fiction, FICTION / Urban Life, FICTION / Crime
REVIEWS Icon
"Slinger, a former Toronto Star columnist, mines the absurdities of life for humour, and has a number of nice turns of phrase and observations on the human condition"

Satirical, corny, raucous and as full of slapstick as a Ben Stiller movie

a fun ride that does what farce is meant to do: enjoyably fill the time.

"Funny, engaging and and original. I enjoyed it thoroughly."

This comic novel is just the right antidote to our all-too-Canadian complacency about how very nice we all are our national identity could use a dose of these dark little comedic broadcasts from the mind of Joey Slinger.

Joey Slinger, formerly a Toronto Star columnist, has published two collections of columns, including No Axe Too Small to Grind, which won the Leacock Medal for Humour, and If It's a Jungle Out There, Why Do I Have to Mow the Lawn? He makes almost no excuses for living in Toronto where he divides his time between the dark craft of comic novels, Punch Line being his first, and searching for his car keys.