The Morning Show Murders by Al Roker, Dick Lochte (With)

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(Hardcover)

  • Pub. Date: November 2009
  • 320pp
  • Sales Rank: 124

    Reader Rating: (6 ratings)

    Detailed Rating: "Rainy Days" See All

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    Product Details

    • Pub. Date: November 2009
    • Publisher: Random House Publishing Group
    • Format: Hardcover, 320pp
    • Sales Rank: 124

    Synopsis

    Nobody can dish morning TV like Al Roker, who’s seen every side of a business that looks good on camera—even when sharks are circling inside the gleaming glass Manhattan media headquarters. Treachery abounds in Roker’s riotously thrilling debut novel—at once an ingenious murder mystery and a delicious behind-the-scenes look at network TV. As fact and fiction collide and the backbiting ignites, The Morning Show Murders will make you wonder: How much of this stuff is real?

    Network TV can be murder. Just ask Billy Blessing, famous for his smile, charm, and ability to survive the shark tank that is high-stakes morning TV. But though Billy has outlived his fair share of prima-donnas, his cooking segment on Wake Up America! is a staple of the American diet, and his Manhattan bistro is a mega-success, his career has just taken a very dangerous turn: His show’s perky cohost, Gin McCauley, has launched into some brass-knuckles contract negotiations. A visiting Mossad agent is about to tell all on the air. And then the network’s head honcho is murdered in his luxury apartment, and an ambitious D.A. decides that Billy is to blame.

    Forensics show that Gerry Gallagher was poisoned and that the fatal coq au vin came from Billy’s restaurant. Gerry had an impressive list of women in his black book—and a news assignment in Afghanistan had plunged the TV exec into the heart of a violent international secret. Now unsavory characters are coming out of the woodwork, and another murder strikes the show’s inner circle. Billy knows that someone’s trying to frame him. He also knows that aruthless international assassin has just arrived in New York City. And suddenly, for the most trusted guy on TV the ultimate career move is not about ratings. It’s about staying alive—and stopping the next murder from becoming tomorrow’s breaking news.

    Publishers Weekly

    Roker (Al Roker's Big Bad Book of Barbecue) teams with Lochte (Sleeping Dog) on a solid, exciting crime novel that revolves around a fictional TV program much like NBC's The Today Show. Billy Blessing, a New York City celebrity chef who owns a restaurant and does a variety of segments on Wake Up, America!, has just begun filming a reality food show when he becomes a suspect in a murder case after Rudy Gallagher, Blessing's executive producer on the show with whom he has clashed, dies after eating some poisoned coq au vin from Blessing's restaurant. When the Manhattan DA shut downs the restaurant and Gallagher's replacement suspends him from his main television gig, Blessing turns sleuth. The gold standard for investigating network TV skullduggery is still the late William DeAndrea's Matt Cobb series (Killed in the Ratings, etc.), but snappy prose and well-developed characters will leave readers wanting to see more of Blessing. (Dec.)

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    Biography

    Al Roker began working at NBC in 1983. He is the author of the bestsellers Al Roker's Big Bad Book of Barbecue and Don't Make Me Stop This Car! He lives in New York City with his wife, ABC news correspondent Deborah Roberts, and their three children. You can reach Al Roker at his website www.alroker.com.

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    Customer Reviews

    Great mystery/humor mixby Miss_T_Ree

    Reader Rating:
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    November 24, 2009: The teaming of loveable TV weatherman Al Roker and veteran crime novelist

    Dick Lochte (author of the award-winning "Sleeping Dog") has resulted in an

    irresistible mystery novel about Billy Blessing, a famous chef and

    restaurateur who also is one of the co-hosts on a morning news show, sort of

    a combination of Emeril or Wolfgang Puck and Roker himself. When his show's

    producer is murdered just days after they've had a verbal blowup - by

    takeout from his restaurant - Billy becomes the NYPD's only viable suspect.

    Since the police are spending all their efforts looking for evidence that

    will sink him, Billy realizes it's up to him to find a better suspect before

    he's put under arrest. The result is a suspenseful, at times hilarious

    comedy thriller that I hope marks the beginning of a series featuring the

    charming Billy.

    Five stars.

    Sleep Inby Ronrose

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    November 05, 2009: Billy Blessing, the celebrated, restaurant owning, chef on the Morning Show, finds himself in trouble. One of his coworkers from the show has been murdered. Chef Blessing is immediately tagged for suspicion by the police. Thus we have the beginnings of an all too familiar plot set in the environs of a television Morning Show. Writers are often advised to write what they know about, but Al Roker's story, with the help of mystery author, Dick Lochte, has stayed to close to home. There are even cute references to that weather guy from the Today Show. Most of the story is average detective, mystery book fare. The action is rather slow paced until the last third of the book, when the search for the unknown killer, starts to get interesting. Nothing out of the ordinary here.


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