Reviewed by: BigAl
Genre: Mystery
Approximate word count: 45-50,000 words
Availability
Click
on a YES above to go to appropriate page in Amazon, Barnes & Noble, or Smashwords
store
Author:
Former
newsman Jack Getze is the fiction editor for Spinetingler magazine and the author of the Austin Carr Mystery
series.
For more
you can check out Carr’s website. Yes, you read right, it’s the character’s
site. If you’re as obsessed with red heads as Carr, you’ll definitely want to
visit.
Description:
“Wall
Street’s miasmal garbage washes up on the Jersey Shore when a small time broker
falls in love: Is he attracted to the beautiful lady—or her brother’s inside
information?
Held
spellbound by a steamy, auburn-haired woman with a dubious past and a
get-rich-quick, insider trading scheme, Austin Carr knocks down a beehive of
bad-acting Bonacellis, including the ill-tempered ‘Mr. Vic’ Bonacelli, who
wants his redhead back, and local mob lieutenant Angelina ‘Mama Bones’
Bonacelli, architect of a strange and excruciating death trap for the
fast-talking stockbroker she calls smarty pants.
To survive,
Austin must unravel threads of jealousy, revenge and new affections, discover
the fate of a pseudo ruby called the Big Mojo and slam the lid on a pending
United States of America vs. Austin Carr insider trading case. Can Austin and
his Jersey Shore mouthpiece possibly out maneuver the savvy U.S. District
Attorney from Manhattan? Will anything matter for Austin ever again if Mama
Bones flips that switch?”
Appraisal:
It’s not
that stockbroker Austin Carr doesn’t want to make a killing in the market.
After all, he does have his kid’s college fund to think about. But when his
slimy partner, “Mr Vic” and one of Vic’s clients comes to him with some insider
information, Carr knows if he acts on it he’d be caught and refuses to get
involved. When someone else buys the stock using Austin’s account, it’s only the
beginning of the troubles coming Carr’s way.
This was a
fun read, at times intense, often funny, and sometimes both. It has a mix of entertaining
characters from the oddball (Vic’s mother, “Mama Bones” for one) to others that
provided comic relief. For example, Austin’s dealings with his ex-wife and
teenage daughter evoked several chuckles from me.
FYI:
Some adult
language.
Although Big Mojo is part of a series, it reads
fine as a standalone.
Format/Typo Issues:
No
significant issues.
Rating: **** Four Stars
2 comments:
Loved this novel! Jack always delivers the goods.
I agree, great book.
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