
Parricide in Pierre
Capital City Murders, Book 8
Failed to add items
Add to Cart failed.
Add to Wish List failed.
Remove from wishlist failed.
Adding to library failed
Follow podcast failed
Unfollow podcast failed
3 months free
Buy for $6.95
No default payment method selected.
We are sorry. We are not allowed to sell this product with the selected payment method
-
Narrated by:
-
Joseph L. Stevenson
A birthday celebration ended in tragedy.
In Pierre, murder is as rare as a visit from a photographer like amateur sleuth Nick O’Flannigan. When both happen at the same time, Nick is welcomed as much for his coverage of the small town as for his photography skills. Local officials entice him to help them with some crime scene photography.
What at first seems to be a burglary gone wrong turns out to be something else, and a mysterious stranger may hold the key to the mystery. Can Nick get to him in time, and will the boy share his secrets?
With an editor on his back to stay out of the news, local authorities who don’t believe him, and a surprise twist, you won’t want to miss this continuation of the compelling Capital City Murders series. If you love the Spenser series, you will love Nick O’Flannigan. Check out this travel mystery today!
©2019, 2020, 2021 Troy Lambert (P)2021 Troy LambertListeners also enjoyed...




















Capital City Murders
Something went wrong. Please try again in a few minutes.
Listener received this title free
The protagonist Nick O'Flannigan is a freelance photographer and an amateur detective. Nick has a contract to take photos of the capitol buildings in each of the 50 US capital cities over a period of 50 weeks for Travel USA magazine. While in Pierre, SD, the local police enlist Nick’s photography skills at a crime scene which leads to his involvement in trying to solve the mysterious unsolved crime.
Interesting Story Premise
Something went wrong. Please try again in a few minutes.
Listener received this title free
Another well-written story from a very good author
Something went wrong. Please try again in a few minutes.
Listener received this title free
There was one thing I found off-putting. For some reason, the authors described the MC's every meal. In their defense, it's possible the restaurants are real places, and they are trying to do a little marketing for local businesses. But because the book is so short, the percentage of meal description to story is very unbalanced. We know people eat. We don't need a description of every meal.
WARNING SPOILERS: The entire premise of the crime is silly. There is no police department in the US where the estranged daughter of the murder victim is put in charge of the crime scene and liaison with the contract photographer. The authors brought up the conflict of interest once but dismissed it as something that can't be helped in a small town. That's just dumb. That's what state and federal agency assists are for. They even had the FBI involved early on in the story (which was the appropriate response) but that just kind of went away as the story went on. As a former LEO, I can let a lot of inaccuracies go for the sake of a good story, but not when it is the entire plot. In this case, the surprise ending ruined the book for me.
NARRATION: Chapter nine needs to be re-edited. There was another track of someone speaking on top of the book track. Editing mistakes happen, but in such a short book, that was a big one to miss. The narrator otherwise did a good job.
One and Done
Something went wrong. Please try again in a few minutes.
Listener received this title free
Great story
Something went wrong. Please try again in a few minutes.
Listener received this title free
The mystery was pretty good, and it didn’t push Shaggy’s photography off to the side in the process. There was a plot point about a ticket shaggy received in a previous story that I’d forgotten about which was worked into the story nicely.
The narration was alright, as always. The narrator doesn’t know the difference between O and zero, which I find stupid and annoying. There are also some serious audio issues in chapter 9. It sounded as if multiple recordings were layered on top of each other.
NOTE: This copy was provided to me free of charge as a digital review copy. The opinions stated in this review are mine and mine alone, I was not paid or requested to give this book a certain rating, suggestion, or approval.
Baskerville Book Reviews
Something went wrong. Please try again in a few minutes.