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Diver's Paradise

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
Why do people close to Roscoe Conklin keep showing up dead—and on the paradise island of Bonaire?
After 25 years on the job, Detective Roscoe Conklin trades his badge for a pair of shorts and sandals and moves to Bonaire, a small island nestled in the southern Caribbean. But the warm water, palm trees, and sunsets are derailed when his long-time police-buddy and friend back home, is murdered.
Conklin dusts off a few markers and calls his old department, trolling for information. It's slow going. No surprise, there. After all, it's an active investigation, and his compadres back home aren't saying a damn thing.
He's 2,000 miles away, living in paradise. Does he really think he can help? They suggest he go to the beach and catch some rays.
For Conklin, it's not that simple. Outside looking in? Not him. Never has been. Never will be.
When a suspicious mishap lands his significant other, Arabella, in the hospital, the island police conduct, at best, a sluggish investigation, stonewalling progress. Conklin questions the evidence and challenges the department's methods. Something isn't right.
Arabella wasn't the intended target.
He was.

Perfect for fans of Randy Wayne White's Doc Ford and Robert B. Parker's Spencer
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    • Publisher's Weekly

      February 3, 2020
      Goodwin’s impressive debut and series launch introduces retired Rockford, Ill., police detective Roscoe Conklin, who, on the verge of 50, has moved to the Caribbean island of Bonaire and bought a small hotel. His days consist of scuba diving trips and picking out tunes on his banjo between bottles of beer. Then Conklin’s former partner, Bill Ryberg, and his wife, Marybeth, are murdered back in Illinois. After providing Conklin with a few details of the deaths, his former colleagues close ranks, leaving him with more questions than answers. Meanwhile, Conklin’s friend Tiffany and her petulant boyfriend arrive for a vacation, and an angry building contractor starts to hound him. When people on the island who have had contact with Conklin start dying violently, he realizes that he may also be a target for the murderer. The plot has a few holes, but the author knows Bonaire well and provides some tantalizing descriptions of island life, including thrilling scuba diving scenes. Fans of John D. MacDonald’s Travis McGee will look forward to seeing more of Conklin.

    • Booklist

      March 1, 2020
      Retired cop Roscoe Conklin is having a fine time on a Caribbean island, imbibing Amstel and managing a hotel he bought when he quit the police. Things couldn't get better. So they get worse. He learns of a double murder?his old cop partner and his wife?in his hometown of Rockford, Illinois. He has the murder file sent to him, and, a good detective, he notices things out of joint: a photo of an ad with no contact info; ballistics dope the cops shouldn't have; a coffee mug with the handle pointing the wrong way. Conklin keeps asking questions, and bad things start happening on his peaceful island. He's beaten up, a friend is hurt in a smashup that might have been meant for him. Then a murder, followed by the realization that it all flows from what happened in Rockford. Goodwin tells this in a matter-of-fact style that sometimes drones on a bit. Still, the content makes up for the style, and patience is rewarded with an airborne-gun moment and, on the way, an explanation for that coffee mug.(Reprinted with permission of Booklist, copyright 2020, American Library Association.)

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  • English

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