About this item
Highlights
- A missing brooch.
- About the Author: D. M. S. Fick's short fiction is published in the Nodin Press anthology, Festival of Crime.
- 288 Pages
- Fiction + Literature Genres, Mystery & Detective
Description
About the Book
Short Summary: A missing brooch. A face set in cement. A lovelorn musician loses his girl and his manager at a country music festival--one to betrayal, the other to murder. The festival staff and the band try to keep him off the Top Ten (suspects) List.
Book Synopsis
A missing brooch. A face set in cement. This is not your average music festival.
Lewis Sinclair, a stalwart and tender country musician, is about to take the stage with his band, the Gentlemen Cowboys, at the premier U.S. country music festival when his girl dumps him for the Cowboys' shifty manager. When that same manager ends up at FallFest's walk of fame with his handprints--and his head--in cement, Lew finds himself on the top ten most wanted list instead of the music charts. With the help of his loyal Cowboys and the close-knit festival staff, Lew must clear his name before the killer gets away--or strikes again.Review Quotes
"Lewis Sinclair and the Gentlemen Cowboys is a charming mystery . . ." --Foreword Reviews
"A delightful music festival venue, a whole passel of charming characters, and a corker of a plot that lets Lew Sinclair and each of his Gentlemen Cowboys take a well-deserved solo as they endeavor to solve the crime. Hoping for an encore!" --Erin Hart, author of the Cormac Maguire/Nora Gavin mysteries
"D. M. S. Fick's fine cast of characters shine in Lewis Sinclair and the Gentlemen Cowboys . . . Suspenseful to the end!" --Christine Husom, author of the Winnebago County Mysteries and the Snow Globe Shop Mysteries
"Patrons looking for thrilling mysteries that include love, jealousy, and betrayal set against a music-festival backdrop will enjoy. Suggest to fans of Dolly Parton and James Patterson's Run, Rose, Run and Peggy O'Neal Peden's Your Killin' Heart." --Library Journal
"This country music mystery hits all the right notes. Readers will hope to hear more from the cowboy crooner and his band." --Publishers Weekly
About the Author
D. M. S. Fick's short fiction is published in the Nodin Press anthology, Festival of Crime. She's also an Emmy-nominated and PromaxBDA award-winning graphic designer and cartoonist. She does design and animation for SciGirls, a PBS Kids program that encourages girls and young women to become involved in science, technology, engineering, and math.
In 2015 Ms. Fick received an Artist Initiative grant from the Minnesota State Arts Board for The Oracle of Nuttown, a half-hour cartoon mash-up of forest creatures, Greek mythology, and classic 1970s movies.
Ms. Fick has lived in Boston, the Twin Cities, and London. She presently resides in an old farmhouse on the Minnesota prairie with her composer husband where they sometimes observe the antics of a colorful fox family and the occasional eagle.