Synopses & Reviews
Synopsis
Earl Town's got problems: a lump on the head, a missing body, two angry FBI agents, and a client he can't take his eyes off. He's also out of his element. He's just an ex-cop from a small New Hampshire town turned private eye, who finds himself looking for a murderer among America's modern-day aristocracy in Greenwich, Westchester, and the Upper East Side. Earl doesn't much like these people, their lifestyles, or their attitudes. Along the way, they'll underestimate him, mock him, seduce him, and even try to kill him. It's up to the "wily sleuth protagonist" - Kirkus Reviews, to outsmart them and bring a cold-blooded killer to justice. "Indian Summer is very well written, full of witty dialogue that kept me reading late into the night. Readers who like Raymond Chandler's Philip Marlowe will enjoy this series. It is a great first novel, and I highly recommend it." -- Readers' Favorite"It is far more mature and carefully-crafted than one ever expects in a debut novel. The characters are engaging, and the protagonist is exceptional. Mr. Brown: we want more." -- Amazon Top 500 Reviewer & Vine Voice
Synopsis
Private Investigator, Earl Town, is hired by a beautiful young professional to find her boss, a financial executive who disappeared amid negotiations on a billion-dollar merger. The case presents Earl with no shortage of possibilities. Is someone trying to scuttle the deal? Did the man with a notorious wandering eye get bumped off by an angry husband or jealous rival? Or perhaps, the stressed-out playboy simply headed off to a warm beach with a sizzling beach bunny.
The mystery leads the PI from Boston to Indian Head, a historic yacht club on the Long Island Sound, and the upper East Side of Manhattan. High society views Town as a rube, an assumption that the "wily sleuth protagonist" (Kirkus Reviews) cultivates and uses to his advantage. When Earl determines foul play is at hand, his chief suspects are the man's co-workers and fellow yachters, all of whom are proud members of America's modern-day aristocracy. They don't much like the PI interfering in their business, and along the way, they'll mock, bludgeon, and even seduce him, but perhaps their gravest error will be to underestimate him.
Is the former small-town cop clever enough to outsmart the upper-crust and bring a cold-blooded killer to justice, or will these pampered 'elites' be the end of Earl Town?
PRAISE FOR INDIAN SUMMER:
"Classic American gumshoe fiction ... The prose is stylish, the pace is fast, the plot believable and nicely twisted. This is a very competent and elegant detective novel." - ReedsyDiscovery
"Indian Summer is very well written, full of witty dialogue that kept me reading late into the night." - Readers' Favorite
"It is far more mature and carefully crafted than one ever expects in a debut novel. The characters are engaging, and the protagonist is exceptional. Mr. Brown: we want more." - Amazon Top 500 Reviewer & Vine Voice
"Earl Town is a character that is elaborately developed, intelligent, and fully drawn. " - Reader's Favorite