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Comments from the Seller: Good Used Former Library Hardcover, Mylar Covered Dust Jacket With Stickers To Cover Library Stamps On Inside Cover And Edge, Tight Clean Pages, Nice Used Copy.
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Seller Name: Donald Mark
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(185 ratings)
Authorized Seller Since: 2005
Ships From: Portland, OR
This first story collection by mystery veteran Roberts, the creator of Hollywood actor/shamus Saxon and Cleveland investigator Milan Jacovich, whose name is forever mispronounced, is full of pleasantly understated surprises. Sure, the title story and "Willing to Work," in which perfect murders come undone because of a single overlooked clue, are routine; so is "Angel of Death," a miniature about an informant who isn't as well protected as he thinks; and Milan's one short outing to date, which finds him unsuccessfully working to protect a Klansman from danger before a Cleveland rally, has more heart than brains. But Saxon manages two surprising solutions in a pair of tidy whodunits, "Little Cat Feet" and "The Catnap," written for the Cat Crimes anthologies. The buildup of tension from a pointless Burger King argument about Elvis Presley to murder most foul in "The Fat Stamp" is expertly managed, even if the final twist is telegraphed early and often. "Good Boys," the tale of the grieving mother who goes on TV to denounce her sons' probable killer, walks a fine line between pathos and cleverness. And "The Brave Little Costume Designer," which updates the Brothers Grimm by taking fearless Oliver Jardiniere from the Martin Beck Theatre deep into the bosom of the New York mob by way of Damon Runyon and fashion sense, is shamelessly funny. And old reliable at novel length (The Chinese Fire Drill, 2001, etc.) proves equally varied and adept in smaller doses in a volume that goes down quicker than the Cleveland sun.
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10/26/2002: This ten-story anthology provides several tales with unique spins on crime, criminals, and the opposition trying to solve cases or stop the felons. Each account is different seemingly running the gamut of the mystery genre from feline sleuths (how can a reader except for canine lovers not like a catnapping tale?) to a private detective Saxon tale to even an Elvis finding. Not for readers who are faithful to one sub-genre, but intended for fans who relish delightfully divergent themes. This collection ultimately displays the talents of Les Roberts (author of the Jacovich novels whose fans obviously selected Cleveland over Los Angeles) to run the mystery table. Harriet Klausner