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Midwives : a novel

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    Johnny Critelli ; and, The knifemen : two novels

    Rare Books

    Two novellas. In the title piece, a man whose mother was killed by a union buster grows up to become a union organizer, while The Knifemen is on a doctor turned killer.

    622720

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    One-way ticket

    Rare Books

    Vic Moine was an investigator for a big railroad in Los Angeles. His new case started with forged freight claims signed by a phony but poetical character who called himself Byron U. Davidson. But it led to elements that weren't at all routine; the "accidental" death of a loyal friend; the victimizing of helpless people; and the tangled clues left by a young mother and an exotic, ruthless woman--Adapted from jacket.

    644156

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    Troublemaker : a Dave Brandstetter novel

    Rare Books

    "Rick Wendell wouldn't hurt a flea. The big, jovial owner of the Hang Ten, a surfing-themed gay bay [that is, bar] on the boardwalk, was loved by regulars and new arrivals alike. But Rick was found naked and dead, with a local hustler named Larry Johns standing over him, smoking gun in hand. Wendell's death is ruled as a homicide and Johns is arrested. Everyone thinks it's a simple open-and-shut case. Everyone except the death claims investigator, Dave Brandstetter. Brandstetter, a homosexual himself, doesn't make the same assumptions about the crime scene and easy story it tells. Larry Johns had enough time to escape had he wanted to. Not to mention Johns lacked any discernable motive, especially since the $200 in Wendell's wallet was left untouched. In an investigation that takes him from sun-scorched hillside ranches to seedy boardwalk bars, Brandstetter gets to the bottom of a twisty mystery in this hardboiled and entertaining portrait of the '70s gay culture by groundbreaking poet and award-winning crime writer Joseph Hansen"--Back cover.

    642326

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    Gravedigger : a Dave Brandstetter novel

    Rare Books

    "Two years ago Charles Westover disgraced himself and his family when he was disbarred for bribery. Westover's daughter Serenity, disgusted with her once beloved father, ran away to a cult founded by a mesmerizingly handsome young man, a self-appointed messiah going by the grimly grandiose name of Azrael. The whereabouts of Serenity pass unknown for years until the police raid Azrael's compound and discover that the cult leader lived up to his ghastly 'Angel of Death' moniker. Thinking his daughter has been murdered, Charles Westover claims her life insurance, and then he too vanishes. Insurance companies don't like to cut a check without a body and especially don't like when the recepient [that is, recipient] is also missing. Hired as a private investigator, David Brandstetter quickly finds himself in a complicated maze of lies and hidden histories. It's not all bad times and extreme hazard for our man Dave. A passionate romance has entered his life with the reappearance of Cecil Harris, a handsome young African American investigative reporter for the local news station looking to get to the bottom of a different kind of story"--Back cover.

    642329

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    The man everybody was afraid of : a Dave Brandstetter novel

    Rare Books

    "A small-town Chief of Police with reactionary politics and national ambitions, Ben Orton struck fear in the hearts of anyone who fell out of line in his little fiefdom of La Caleta. Most recently that has included gay rights activists pushing for the hiring of a police officer from their community. When big Ben is found in his backyard bludgeoned to death by a large terracotta pot, the police arrest the outspoken gay owner of a local nursery. Orton had a life insurance policy that brings death claims investigator Dave Brandstetter north to pry. As far as Dave can tell, the cops did almost nothing to investigate Orton's death and what evidence they did compile doesn't seem to add up. Dave quickly learns that the pool of suspects is much deeper than the police reported. Ben Orton may have seen himself as a pillar of the community but what many in La Caleta saw instead was a violent man whose commitment to enforcement didn't always also include room for the law. With an ailing father in the hospital and a relationship headed toward the rocks, a very distracted Brandstetter finds himself making more wrong moves than right while those on the other side of the thin blue line are making it painfully obvious his presence is not wanted"--Back cover.

    642327

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    Jonathan D. Hale papers relating to Champ Ferguson

    Manuscripts

    Collection contains eight items dated 1865 to 1866 relating to Jonathan D. Hale's attempt to recoup his losses from the 1862 destruction of his Tennessee property by Confederate guerillas led by Champ Ferguson, and to Ferguson's 1865 war crimes trial. Material includes two inventory descriptions of Hale's property destroyed and other outcomes of Ferguson's raid, one of which includes details of neighbors who were also victimized (both approximately 1865); one plea and answer of Hale to a bill of complaint filed by J.W. McHenry regarding a military assessment of Hale's property damage, which mentions guerilla activities of Ferguson and others, approximately 1865; four letters concerning Hale's claims against Ferguson and his cohorts, 1865 to 1866; and a narrative in the hand of Hale titled "History of a Saw Log" that describes the cutting of a giant poplar tree and was probably recorded while collecting oral testimony against Ferguson, dated April 16, 1865. Most items are in pen; some have penciled additions.

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