View Single Post
Old 02-20-2013, 09:59 PM   #95
NightBird
Wizard
NightBird ought to be getting tired of karma fortunes by now.NightBird ought to be getting tired of karma fortunes by now.NightBird ought to be getting tired of karma fortunes by now.NightBird ought to be getting tired of karma fortunes by now.NightBird ought to be getting tired of karma fortunes by now.NightBird ought to be getting tired of karma fortunes by now.NightBird ought to be getting tired of karma fortunes by now.NightBird ought to be getting tired of karma fortunes by now.NightBird ought to be getting tired of karma fortunes by now.NightBird ought to be getting tired of karma fortunes by now.NightBird ought to be getting tired of karma fortunes by now.
 
NightBird's Avatar
 
Posts: 2,364
Karma: 3724797
Join Date: Jan 2010
Location: California
Device: KPW, KF, KF HD, iPod Touch
Book #7 in Ed McBain's Matthew Hope series, Puss in Boots, is $2.00.

Quote:
A long shadow looms above her. Then a hand clamps over her mouth and a blade sinks into her back. Blood splatters on the film reel case beside her, and a young life is cut short.

Lawyer Matthew Hope gets a call from Carlton Markham, who’s been arrested for his filmmaker wife’s murder but says he didn’t do it. Witnesses fly forward to proclaim his guilt, but Markham’s not giving up that easily on his innocence. And when Matthew digs deeper into the victim’s business—from heavy financial backers to sleazy egomaniacs—he finds she may not have been the perfect lady she had seemed. The one piece of evidence that could set Markham free and finger the real killer is the victim’s film reel. Only it’s gone, along with the film’s sexy star. Now Matthew needs to infiltrate the seedy side of the film industry in order to find the missing reel and solve the murder.

From master storyteller Ed McBain, Puss in Boots is another Matthew Hope Mystery classic, the tale of a woman who aimed too high and the many men who fell for it all.
Quote:
The Matthew Hope Series

In 1978, McBain brought out the first of his Matthew Hope novels. Goldilocks inaugurated a series in which the lead investigator begins as a newly transplanted (from New York to Florida) civil attorney who soon turns to criminal law--hardly a surprising career move given the bodies that pile up around his practice. Each fairytale-themed title refers to a particularly gruesome crime; its motive is always bestial and its principals are frequently irresistible beauties. Hope is not as skeptical as he ought to be and is inclined to believe a woman’s story, whether she is a grouchy old garden maven with three children buried in the yard or an asylum inmate with a billion dollars coming her way. Hope’s optimism leads him into dangerous situations, and he often cannot penetrate the veils of deceit in which his clients are naturally swathed. Readers tended to enjoy the occasional, more freeform Hope diversion between the tightly woven procedurals of McBain’s better known series.
Salem Press
NightBird is offline   Reply With Quote