Trout Fishing For Bodies (Book 2) (Bob Roosevelt Mystery Series) Private Detective Bob Roosevelt is tired of crime, frustrated about not finding the love of his life, and sick of his snide guardian angel. His guardian angel tells Roosevlet he would be better off fo
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| Title | : | Trout Fishing For Bodies (Book 2) (Bob Roosevelt Mystery Series) |
| Author | : | |
| Rating | : | 4.83 (252 Votes) |
| Asin | : | B006THXBB8 |
| Format Type | : | - |
| Number of Pages | : | 0 Pages |
| Publish Date | : | 2012-01-03 |
| Genre | : |
Editorial : "Try to imagine the book that would be written by a brain that partakes of Louis L'Amour, Richard Brautigan and Elmore Leonard, and you will have some idea of the playful mayhem that Robert K. Swisher, Jr. has unleashed upon the world in his Bob Roosevelt Mystery Series of which Trout Fishing For Bodies is a part." Kenneth Hicks
Private Detective Bob Roosevelt is tired of crime, frustrated about not finding the love of his life, and sick of his snide guardian angel. He decides he will head to the mountains of Colorado and go fishing. His guardian angel tells Roosevlet he would be better off forgetting clean air, pine trees, and a beautiful stream and head to the seedy bars of Denver. Never one to take good advice Roosevelt goes fishing. But what does he catch? Not a trout begging to be fried in bacon greese but a naked lady with a hole in her head. Crooked cops, cowboys that forgot the cowboy good guy code, and a murder that spans from Texas to Colorado. A funny romp through the absurd world we live in and a who done it that will leave you scratching your head until the last page. That is unless you are one of those people that read the last page first.
The energy and passion that Bill has about what happened during his life to this point leaps from the pages, grabs you by the scruff of the neck and draws you in.
The authors unselfish pursuit of justice for his friend Sergei is unbelievable. It was the exact book I needed for class at less than half the price that the school was asking. Steinbeck and Capa share rooms during their trip. He also seems to regularly confuse the letters Y and T, and left and right (e.g., on the horrible "Guntersville Tom Bevill/ Cave trail," and the mediocre "Oak Mt Lake Tranquility loop"). He failed to do so. The reader listens in as they speak to Tibetan monks and nuns who fear the demise of their culture. Because of the voluminous and extremely revealing written personal and professional correspondence by Darwin and his acquaintances a very good record of his health can be deduced from it. The first two chapters are more a list of historical events and kind of dry, but it gets much better. It
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