
Motor City Blue
An Amos Walker Mystery, Book 1
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Narrated by:
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Mel Foster
"If I see my name in tomorrow's paper yours will be in the next edition. Bordered in black."
Marla Bernstein is a pretty, dark-haired teenager who also happens to be the ward of Ben Morningstar - a semi-retired mobster who prefers to keep family business out of the newspapers. When Marla suddenly disappears, the gang boss is forced to call in private eve Amos Walker, who quickly learns his new employer doesn't take "no" for an answer when he offers a job opportunity.
Unfortunately, the only clue to Marla's whereabouts is a pornographic photograph that clearly proves that she's become part of a world that disgusts even her criminal guardian....
The photo, in turn, leads Walker into the seedy world of Detroit's porn shops and blue movies, where Marla's trail becomes even murkier and increasingly more dangerous to follow. As first cases go, Walker could have certainly asked for one less challenging.
You can share your thoughts about Loren D. Estleman's Motor City Blue in the new ibooks virtual readers' group at www.ibooksinc.com. ©1980 Loren D. Estleman (P)2012 Audible, Inc.Listeners also enjoyed...




















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Then I started listening, and could not believe the narrator's voice. Instead of the hard boiled, cynical, noir PI you expect (and it's in first person) I heard someone with the perfect enunciation and higher pitched and upbeat voice of a young happy go lucky accountant. It was like listening to Chandler or Hammett or Spillane narrated by the voice of a Disney nature documentary: "Well, old Bucky may not be the oldest beaver in the pond, but by golly he's smart enough not to fall for the trap of that sneaky old alligator!" You hear a line that would fit in a Phillip Marlowe novel, but read by this happy, super enunciated narrator, and you picture Marlowe or Mike Hammer slapping the narrator and telling him to put down that book and go back to your prep school and never show your face around here again.
It's a shame, but I simply can't listen to it any more. I'll go back to reading these.
Noir style story ruined by a bad choice narrator
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