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  • Tin City

  • The Twin Cities P.I. Mac McKenzie Novels, Book 2
  • By: David Housewright
  • Narrated by: Brent Hinkley
  • Length: 7 hrs and 26 mins
  • 3.0 out of 5 stars (2 ratings)

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Tin City

By: David Housewright
Narrated by: Brent Hinkley
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Summary

Mac McKenzie is rich. So rich that he’s left his job as a Twin Cities police officer and spends his time doing favors large and small for friends. So when an old Marine buddy of his father’s calls with a request, Mac takes the time to help him out. And it is one of the stranger favors he’s ever been asked: The elderly Mr. Mosley, a beekeeper, wants Mac to find out why his bees are suddenly dying in droves.

Mac does some digging and before long turns up a hornet’s nest of trouble in the person of Frank Crosetti, a new neighbor on the property abutting Mosley’s bees. What started out as an innocent investigation into some unregulated pesticide quickly turns lethal. Crosetti sticks around long enough to make some very specific threats, then disappears into the wind leaving behind a vicious rape, a lifeless body, and a very angry McKenzie bursting for someone to blame.

With only the faintest of trails to follow and a suspicious group of federal agents gunning for him, Mac dives underground, taking only a stash of cash and a small arsenal with him on his undercover mission. Before long, Mac’s deep in the forgotten corners of Minneapolis sniffing for any sign of Crosetti, unable to rest until he gets results.

Combining engaging humor and wit with action-packed storytelling, Housewright’s second Mac McKenzie novel is clever, compelling, and thoroughly enjoyable.

©2005 David Housewright (P)2020 Blackstone Publishing

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Jeep Cherokee

I don’t know why, but it seems to be incredibly important to the author to remind you every few sentences of dialogue that the protagonist drives a Jeep Cherokee, is it some sort of endorsement deal? “I got into the Jeep Cherokee” “I dove behind the Jeep Cherokee” “

Shittily written main character, stereotypical macho angry annoying ex policeman. Treats all his emotional travails with bourbon “no ice”
The narrator embodies the constantly angry trope with gusto. Maybe he’s a good narrator but he doesn’t exactly have much in the way of material to work with.
I’m sure there’s a market for this kind of brainless pulp bullshit, but I hope I’m wrong.

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