Published by Avon, NY, 1995, 1st edition, SIGNED, INSCRIBED, PAPERBACK, (VG+),, 1995
Seller: Librarium, East Chatham, NY, U.S.A.
First Edition Signed
Avon, NY, 1995, 1st ed, SIGNED & INSCRIBED by the author Amanda Cockrell on the first page & title page, VG+ PAPERBACK, clean & tight, book very good+ (VG+) 3164 [Ss93DG].
Published by New York: Avon Books (AvoNova) January 1995 First Paperback Printing ISBN:0380717107, 1995
ISBN 10: 0380717107 ISBN 13: 9780380717101
Seller: N & A Smiles, Kellerberrin, WA, Australia
Soft cover. Condition: Very Good. VG+.
Published by Avon 1995 Paperback, 1995
ISBN 10: 0380716976 ISBN 13: 9780380716975
Seller: Book Haven, Wellington, WLG, New Zealand
Condition: Good. Acclaimed Cleveland detective Gil Disbro is back in a gripping new adventure featuring the high-stakes world of big-time boxing. The bell rings when Lowell Amerine, a distinguished elderly judge, hires the chain-smoking, teetotaling detective to find out who has been blackmailing him over a body buried in his backyard. Amerine's no-good nephew has already told him that the body is that of a girlfriend who accidentally died of a drug overdose. But now that there is not one blackmailer, but two, the judge is getting worried. Gil soon discovers that there is no shortage of possible suspects. Is the blackmailer the ne'er-do-well nephew, Barry Sprague, or perhaps Gus Cusimano, the Mafia don who has been pressuring Sprague to pay up on his gambling debts? Maybe it is Pete Botkin, the shady fight promoter who skipped town after getting on the wrong side of Cusimano. Or Disbro's old nemesis, Slick Underhill, the Midwest's con artist par excellence. Gil soon finds himself dodging both bullets and the police as he tries to thwart a brutal killer and unravel a brilliant scam. In addition to a growing body count, Disbro also has to contend with a beautiful young woman with a secret. His attraction to her threatens his relationship with his professor lover, Helen. In this, his best Gil Disbro mystery yet, James E. Martin exposes the seamy underside of Cleveland's streets and neighborhoods with expert detail and nonstop action. Harlan Ellison, James Ellroy, and Thomas Gifford have praised Martin's writing since it first appeared. And reviewers claim that James E. Martin is doing for Cleveland what Raymond Chandler did for Los Angeles. Hard-hitting, gritty, and authentic, A Fine and Private Place willundoubtedly secure Martin's place in the hard-boiled pantheon. 256 pages.