Crossroad Blues

thumbnail

List Price: CDN$ 8.99 (CAD)
  • Lowest New Price: CDN$ 70.25
  • Lowest Used Price: CDN$ 0.77
  • Total New: 2
  • Total Used: 21
  • Total Collectible: 0
  • Total Refurbished: 0
  • Author : Ace Atkins
  • Binding : Mass Market Paperback
  • EAN : 9780312971922
  • Edition : First Edition
  • ISBN : 0312971923
  • Label : Minotaur Books
  • Languages : Original Language: English, Published: English
  • Manufacturer : Minotaur Books
  • Number Of Pages : 304
  • Package Dimensions : 0.85 inches (Height) x 6.81 inches (Length) x 0.33 pounds (Weight) x 4.21 inches (Width)
  • Product Group : Book
  • Publication Date : 2000-02-15
  • Publisher : Minotaur Books
  • SKU : ACOMMP2_book_usedverygood_0312971923
  • Studio : Minotaur Books

Florida journalist and former college football player Ace Atkins takes full advantage of the legendary blues guitarist Robert Johnson's life, music, and strange death in his first mystery. And even though it bears the weight of two of the genre's most overused icons--a New Orleans setting and an ex-sports star as hero--Crossroad Blues is fresh and imaginative enough in all its other aspects to inspire hope for an ongoing series. Yes, Nick Travers did play for the New Orleans Saints, but it wasn't an injury that turned him into a part-time detective and full-time expert on the blues. "Nick had been thrown out of the NFL for kicking his coach's ass during a Monday Night Football game," Atkins tell us. Now he teaches the occasional blues history class at Tulane, works on his biography of Guitar Slim, and plays his harmonica at JoJo's Blues Bar--a place so lovingly described that it should be real even if it isn't. When a Tulane colleague disappears on a quest for some hitherto unknown Johnson recordings in the Mississippi Delta town of Greenwood, Travers goes to look for him--and walks into a murderous mess of colorful sociopaths, including a deadly teenage Elvis lookalike and a slimy record producer who not only orchestrates violent crimes but also dares to use the blues as a marketing ploy for a chain of nightclubs. More, please. --Dick Adler

- From Amazon.com

Look for Similar Items in these Categories:


Leave a Comment:

(required)

(will not be published) (required)


Copyright © 1999-2012 Data Growth Pty Ltd. All rights reserved.
Privacy Policy | Terms of Use |