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FROM NASHVILLE P.I. TO BROTHEL MAINTENANCE MAN…
How did Nashville P.I. Harry James Denton wind up working in the world’s most famous whorehouse?
Because the Feds made him a deal he couldn’t refuse—help smoke out a money-laundering scheme secretly operating out of Reno’s notorious, legendary, legal cathouse, The Mustang Ranch.
After failing to reconcile with his ex-, who’s about to give birth to their daughter, doing some simple snooping in a house full of gorgeous gals sounds like a pretty good deal.
But it turns out to be a raw deal when one of the Mustang girls turns up murdered and Harry is the prime suspect. The only way to save his neck is to risk it—and that means making a Nevada-sized gamble that he can corner a killer who holds all the aces…
This sixth installment in Steven Womack’s award-winning, best-selling Music City Murders series was short-listed for the Private Eye Writers of America Shamus Award. In fact, every installment of the series either won or was nominated for a major mystery award.
Harry — and his creator Steven Womack — will steal the hearts of readers who like their sleuths witty, self-effacing, and slightly Colombo-esque.
You’ll love Womack’s writing. Readers have compared him to John D. MacDonald, only with a big meat n’ three side dish of smart-ass on steroids.
“Womack is right up there with Parker, Jance, and Grafton. He writes a fast-moving, humorous, well-plotted detective story. No psychology like Rendell, no agenda like Cornwell. His Nashville hero, Harry Denton, is colorful and likeable, and although he has little money and lives on the edge, he has the charisma of Parker’s Spenser and Jance’s Beaumont. I highly recommend all of the Denton series. I’ve read every one, and haven’t been disappointed yet.” —Joan Benny, Amazon Reviewer
“Steve Womack delivers the best opening lines of any book I’ve read in this genre, and his plots and prose take the reader on a wild ride, suspenseful and hilarious simultaneously.” — Amazon Reviewer
“In the overcrowded field of private eye fiction, Steven Womack stands head and shoulders above most of the herd.”–Val McDermid, Manchester Evening News