Two teenagers fresh out of stir set their sights on what looks like
easy money in this classic thriller from 1958, only to get a painful
education in how quickly and drastically a simple plan can spin out of
control.
Dolores Hitchens wrote crime novels that were both tough and
compassionate, with a sharp eye for the emotional scars that violence
leaves. The basis for Jean-Luc Godard's film Band of Outsiders, Fools'
Gold is a swift and unadorned tale of three young people--two boys just
released after being incarcerated for a juvenile offense, and an
orphaned girl living in a house full of secrets--whose lives are rapidly
torn apart by what starts as a simple plan of robbery. It echoes other
classic American narratives of youth astray and on the run, and with its
headlong pace catches the rhythm of adolescent crisis, as Hitchens's
protagonists find themselves caught up in a situation spiraling beyond
their control.