In Michigan, the roar in the Roaring Twenties was the deafening blast of
a sawed-off shotgun or the staccato thunder of a Thompson submachine gun
punctuating a bank robbery. In post-WWI Michigan, a plague of ruthless
desperadoes, better armed and driving faster cars than the police, cut a
deadly swath across the state ranked eighth in the country for bank
robberies. Tom Powers uncovers a violent and forgotten era in Michigan
in 23 riveting chapters. The Wild West didn't die with the closing of
the frontier; it came to Michigan in the 1920s and 1930s.