"Birtcher has outdone himself!"
Baron R. Birtcher has outdone himself. RUBY TUESDAY is the
second hardboiled mystery in the Mike Travis series. The
Mike Travis character was first introduced in the
impressive debut novel, ROADHOUSE BLUES (October 2000).
Both novels are fast, exciting and tough to put down. In his latest, RUBY TUESDAY, we start up where ROADHOUSE
BLUES ends off. What's great is you do not need to read
one in order to read the other. Each novel is a complete
novel all by itself. (However, if you read one, I can
almost guarantee you will want to read the other). A trend setting band works diligently in the recording
studio to put the final touches on their next album
release. The pressure is on. Every new release has
outsold the previous release. And with each new release
there is a spike in sales of previous releases. So when
the band realizes the tapes with their recording is
missing, everything falls apart. Things only get worse
when the lead singer, who was perhaps the brains and brawn
behind the band, allegedly commits suicide. What ever
happened to the recordings? Were they stolen? Erased?
There are no answers until years later ... Mike Travis was born into money. His brother and he
inherited the family business. While his brother decided
to work at the company, Travis became a police officer, and
shared in half the company profits as a silent partner.
After taking an early retirement as detective with the Los
Angels Police Department, Travis decides to sail his yacht
toward home, Kona, Hawaii. Ready to relax and enjoy life, the last thing Travis
expected was to get sucked into a multiple murder
investigation. To make matters more complicated the
victims are murdered inside Travis' house. Ruby is one of
the deceased and was a good friend of Travis', while
another was a member of the band whose recordings
disappeared, a third was the producer for the recordings
and the list goes on ... None of the details makes much sense except for the fact
that the Ruby's husband, Tino, also a friend of Travis',
looks like the prime suspect. After all, what was she
doing in the house with the drug abusing band junkies?
Dedicated to getting to the bottom of the mess, Travis
hopes to clear Tino's name. But he hasn't much time. With
Tino in custody, the local police are ready to call the
case closed ... From page one until the last page, Birtcher knows how to
engage his readers. In the classic noir style, he builds
the tension and suspense until you think you can't take any
more ... but there is always more to be had. A regular
whodunit, Birtcher feeds clues and designates suspects.
Great dialogue, beautiful narrative and description (which
make me want to move to Hawaii) make the entire book
resemble a movie. Everything is three-dimensional. The
plot is tight. The mystery is clever. The ending a huge
surprise. I look forward to Birtcher's next novel. © 2003 Phillip Tomasso III
Reviewed by Phillip Tomasso
Posted November 19, 2003
SummaryBaron R. Birtcher has once again produced the kind of
hardboiled novel that grabs you by the throat and doesn't
let go. A book rich with characters and dialogue so finely
drawn they will stay with you long after the last page has
been turned.
When Mike Travis sails his yacht into the tropical harbor
of Kona, Hawaii, he expects to put LA Homicide behind him;
to let the warm emerald sea wash the blood of years from
his hands.
Instead, he finds his family home ravaged by shotgun
blasts, littered with drugs, and the bodies of a dead rock
star and his groupies. And then it gets worse.
Searching the island for answers, Travis discovers that
someone is out there ahead of him. And more people are
dying. But all there is for him to go on is the rumor of a
lost studio recording by one of the world's most infamous
bands - a tape that could be worth millions.
Filled with uncommon atmosphere and style, Ruby Tuesday
brings to life the sometimes seamy back streets and dark
underbelly of a tropical paradise, and the world of music
and high finance; where wealth and greed are steeped in
sex, vengeance and murder.
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