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Very good book
A surprising book!
Cleveland, Elliot Ness, Murder and Politics come together!

the curse of rocky colavito
Another superb book by Terry Pluto
The Tribe...this is my team!

Almost Instantly Forgetable!
A well-crafted book!This book, in particular, also abounds with terrific philosophical sayings such as: "Michael Jordan says that you always miss the shot you don't take." Yup. You do. Which ought to convince folks to make more attempts at the things that mean the most to them. Six pages earlier was my favorite: "A very wise Clevelander once told me that gratitude is not only the greatest of virtues but the parent of all the others."
As a devoted reader of this series, I was very upset when, in the previous book, Milan's boyhood pal, Lt. Marko Meglich took a bullet intended for Milan. (Not that I wanted to lose Milan, because I certainly didn't. I just didn't want to lose Marko, either.) It was somewhat appeasing that six months later, Milan is also still suffering the loss. It is in order to shake him up some that another old friend, the newspaperman Ed Stahl, recommends Milan for a job with a Hollywood film company that's shooting in Cleveland. The job is as a glorified baby-sitter for the young male star of the film - the 24 year-old Darren Anderson.
Darren, however, resents the 'tending' and point blank tells Milan to leave him alone for one particular Sunday, the end of which sees Darren in a new role--that of corpse. Milan takes it personally, and sets out to find the killer, even if he no longer has a real client. Along the way, we meet some familiar folk from previous books, as well as a new love for Milan. This is good, as he definitely needed one.
If you've ever wondered about Cleveland, the Milan Jacovich books will show you the real thing, warts and all, but subtly mixed in with the rest of the cityscape that those of us who live here, love as much as Milan does. His descriptions of the places he visits should endear him to the Chamber of Commerce, while the taut story lines, unique characterizations and marvelous writing should endear him to readers of all kinds of books.
GREAT CHARACTERS IN A FASCINATING PLOT AND SETTINGHis Hollywood-type characters ring true, and he manages to make the spoiled young movie star, Darren Anderson, sympathetic and appealing all the while he is being a louse. And hulking, tattooed muscle-for-hire Albert Wysocki is one of those indelible bad guys you love to hate - - quirky and funny while being chillingly sinister.
It is Cleveland private op Milan Jacovich, in his ninth and best-yet outing, whose presence is the glue that holds it all together. His wry wit is in full throttle, and his often rigid principles cost him dearly here, as they usually do, and we find ourselves rooting for his budding relationship with a bright, funny woman who matches his strength and determination.
A fast-action and highly entertaining entry in a superior series.


Excellent read
Could identify with the CRF "Sub q's" the whole 9 yards
Cat lovers--You'll be able to relate

Tediously finding out whatever happened to Jacy Farrow
"...this river remembers its source..."
Funny, moving, insightful

Can you go home again?
a great book about a father and a son, and funny too.
This ex-Clevelander loved Dan McGraw's bookI grew up in Cleveland in the 70's and 80's and was a big Cleveland Brown's fan. I actually attended the last Championship game a professional Cleveland team won...the 1963 NFL title game. So, I understand the pain Clevelander's have experienced for the past 40 years.
McGraw moves back to Cleveland to spend time with his Father who is dying and to cover the first year experience of the "new" Browns. It sounds like a smaltzy experience, but it is anything but.
The power of the book is the complete honesty that McGraw relates about his Dad and himself. There is no sugar coating of the "good and bad" about their character and their relationship.
McGraw also gives an accurate description of how Cleveland has been homogenized into "any town" USA and gives a feel for today's predictable NFL machine. I'm one of those "don't care about the new Browns" type.
I would love to sit down and have a beer with Dan in one of those old crappy Cleveland bars.


Excellent book!
History of the Cleveland Mafia
Very Easy Reading

Occasionally interesting but often depressingIn addition to making readers reach for their Prozac, there's a lot about this book that I didn't like. First, the quality of writing was annoying. Second, I repeatedly had the feeling that her smattering of interesting stories were overly embellished and hence not entirely believable. Third, Dr. Grim leaves readers wondering if she's still working in the ER or is now doing hair transplants. The central question in this book is whether Grim can shake her disaffection with ER medicine and keep working in that field, or whether she decides to accept a job offer from a friend to perform hair transplants and other cosmetic procedures. Fourth, this book is by no means a complete or even passably complete narrative of what it is like to be an ER physician.
A great collection of tales
Honest, Affecting, Great ReadAt the same time, there's no egotistical I'm a doctor bravado...you get a sense that Grim is smart, but at times muddling her way through this -- guided by a combination of knowledge, luck, and circumstance -- as most of us would be in similar circumstances.
Well written, fast-paced, this was one of those books I felt compelled to kept going back to, even though I had other things to do, and read in my spare moments over just two days...
I'll never watch ER or any of the medical shows the same way again, nor will I ever take it so lightly when they start yelling "we're gonna have to crack the chest..." after reading Grim's real account.
Grim's a writer with heart and soul and smarts...I hope we hear more from her.
Mary Shomon, Author of "Living Well With Hypothyroidism: What Your Doctor Doesn't Tell You...That You Need to Know"


Les Roberts gets better & better
A great mystery...snowstorm reading!
A SHOCK ENDING THAT WILL HAUNT YOU FOR A LONG TIMEThe city of Cleveland, with its working-class milieu and its stately mansions and sweeping lawns, comes so vibrantly alive that it's almost one of the characters.
Much has been said of the shocking ending. It is unexpected, sad, and completely unforgettable. Only a writer with Les Roberts' craft, control and confidence could have carried it off. He's at the top of his form here.


A stunning debut erotic thriller."Every large city has its sexual underground," Richard Montanari writes in his debut thriller, DEVIANT WAY, "its network of gender misfits, tomcats, he/shes, pedophiles and assorted other deviants - people who, for the most part, don't function very well in the sunlight."
One would like to think Montanari knows this territory as a result of the writing he has done for The Chicago Tribune, Detroit Free Press and a host of other publications, as opposed to having come by it by other means. He knows the topic well and, thankfully, he knows how to write.
Most of the hype surrounding this book has concerned itself with the author's creative descriptions of kinky violence, but I don't think this is the book's best point. Rather, we are treated to a remarkably sensitive, brutally honest portrayal of a cop, a veteran detective in a depressingly crime-ridden province of Cleveland. Jack Paris feels more like an Everyman than a cut-out hero, a painfully flawed, borderline alcoholic divorcee with enough vestigial perspective to still get sick at horrific crime scenes. He has indeed seen it all, but some part of him still can't believe it, until it is thrust uncompromisingly into his face as the events of the novel unfold. Then, everyone becomes a suspect, and there are sufficient red herrings tossed around to warrant his encroaching paranoia, along with our dawning perception concerning the truth of the notion that a paranoid is simply someone who knows all the facts.
A serial killer(s) is on the loose in Cleveland. The police are not sure if it's one person or two, but we know better, because interspersed throughout the book are chapters written in the first person from one of the killers' perspective. We know how he thinks, and pretty much what the game is; what we don't know is who he and his partner are. Neither does Jack, but he's got a lot of suspicions, and these only escalate when the case is declared officially closed following an apparent suicide.
Complicating matters is the seemingly innocent game-playing of a closet voyeur and his increasingly adventurous wife, a couple who think they are boldly exploring the subterranean caverns of depravity without realizing that they are only lightly skimming its edges.
The plot races along adroitly - you might get the impression that you missed a reel if you don't pay careful attention - and is neatly wound up with one of those great final chapters that requires you to re-think what you thought you were sure of (I immediately went back and re-read Chapter 36, with great delight). But in the end, it's not the plot but Jack Paris that will linger with you.
I think Richard Montanari is a coming force in popular fiction. His writing has the kind of finger-popping flair that makes you want to re-read passages just for the style and rhythm, especially the dialogue of its more colorful characters.
I have a sneaking suspicion - and a fervent hope - that we will hear from Jack Paris again. I highly recommend this book.
--Lee Gruenfeld, author of THE HALLS OF JUSTICE
A book that doesn't give its secrets away--until the end!
A Must Read