Clydesdale Moves to Essex Park
Author | : | |
Rating | : | 4.43 (547 Votes) |
Asin | : | 1610980174 |
Format Type | : | paperback |
Number of Pages | : | 148 Pages |
Publish Date | : | 2018-02-05 |
Language | : | English |
DESCRIPTION:
About the Author Bob Archman is a retired man living in rural Virginia. He tends to write about men who are actively engaged in their jobs and life and happen to be gay, rather than gay men who happen to have a job. He is interested in relationships between mature, hard working men. A friend of his once asked, “Why be gay and not like sex?” Most of the men in Bob Archman’s novels know the answer to that question. He also likes Agatha Christie’s mature detectives, Hercule Poirot and Jane Marple. . He has liked mysteries ever sin
confusing and uniteresting story Andrew Rosen and way too much badly written erotica. Would have liked a better mix of story and sex. The majority of the book was sexual description often confusing who the characters were and devoid of any reason for having sex other than they happened to be around. Sorry Bob.
When the scam turned into murder, there was an oversupply of suspects. Redneck detective, Clydesdale, discovered a clever scam that could relieve the victims of their cash and use the victims' failing memories to avoid detection. No place could be safer than the wealthy, high-security, retirement community of Essex Park. There was a closeted executive director, an owner with mob connections and a staff member with a taste for young, oriental, boy toys. The residents of Essex Park were afflicted with declining memories as time took its toll, but oddly, inheritances seemed to be vanishing too. Short, ugly, sharp-witted and horse-hung, Clydesdale had to use all his assets to get to the bottom of the complicated scheme involving fraud, murder and even prostitution.. There was a fox in the hen house. Located on a former plantation in Virginia, the residents felt safe from all the problems of modern America
Bob Archman is a retired man living in rural Virginia. He is interested in relationships between mature, hard working men. He has liked mysteries ever since he got his first Hardy Boy’s book in 1957. . He tends to write about men who are actively engaged in their jobs and life and happen to be gay, rather than gay men who happen to have a job. He also likes Agatha Christie’s mature detectives, Hercule Poirot and Jane Marple. A