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Monkey Man
 
 
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Monkey Man [Hardcover]

Steve Brewer (Author)
4.8 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (4 customer reviews)

Price: $24.00 & eligible for FREE Super Saver Shipping on orders over $25. Details
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Book Description

October 2006
Having coffee with a new client, things seem to be going well until the monkey with the gun shows up. Now Bubba's facing an uncooperative police force, a barrel full of suspects, and an intern who drives everyone bananas. And he's got to figure out which of the animals at the Albuquerque zoo really belong behind bars--before another one winds up in the morgue.


Editorial Reviews

From Booklist

The seventh Bubba Mabry mystery begins with a bang: Albuquerque PI Bubba is enjoying a chat with a potential client when a guy in an ape suit walks into the cafe and pulls out a gun; suddenly, Bubba has blood all over him (not his, but still . . .). Soon he's juggling a grieving fiancee, a snoopy reporter (who also happens to be Bubba's wife), a hypereager intern (named, appropriately enough, Keen), and a suspiciously high death rate at the local zoo. This series offers a nice mix of low-rent comedy, solid action, and general amiability. David Pitt
Copyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved

About the Author

Author and newspaper columnist Steve Brewer grew up in Arkansas, but called New Mexico home for nearly two decades before moving in 2003 to Redding, California. He spent twenty-two years in the newspaper business and still writes a weekly humor column for The Albuquerque Tribune. The column, "The Home Front," is distributed to hundreds of newspapers nationwide by Scripps-Howard News Service. Brewer is a board member of Mystery Writers of America. He lives in Redding, California with his wife, two sons, and a dog named Elvis. information.

Product Details

  • Hardcover: 300 pages
  • Publisher: Intrigue Press (October 2006)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 1890768731
  • ISBN-13: 978-1890768737
  • Product Dimensions: 8.8 x 5.9 x 0.9 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 15.5 ounces (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 4.8 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (4 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #2,136,725 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

More About the Author

STEVE BREWER is the author of more than 20 books about crooks, including the recent crime novels LOST VEGAS, THE BIG WINK and CALABAMA.

His first novel, LONELY STREET, was made into a Hollywood comedy starring Robert Patrick, Jay Mohr and Joe Mantegna. BOOST currently is under film/TV option.

Brewer's short fiction appeared in the anthologies DAMN NEAR DEAD, THE LAST NOEL, CRIMES BY MOONLIGHT and WEST COAST CRIME WAVE, and he's published articles in Mystery Scene, Crimespree and Mystery Readers' Journal.

A former journalist and syndicated humor columnist, Brewer now works as a writing coach, book doctor and University of New Mexico lecturer. A frequent speaker at mystery conventions, he was toastmaster at Left Coast Crime in 2011.

Married and the father of two adult sons, Brewer lives in Albuquerque, NM.

More at www.stevebrewer.blogspot.com. Write him at abqbrewer@gmail.com.

 

Customer Reviews

4 Reviews
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Average Customer Review
4.8 out of 5 stars (4 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Redding, California Novelist Sics PI on Monkey Business at an Albuquerque Zoo, November 3, 2006
By 
This review is from: Monkey Man (Hardcover)
Steve Brewer may live with his family in Redding, California and give readings from his novels in the Bay Area, but he left his heart in Albuquerque. Not to worry, though; private investigator Bubba Mabry is on the job in that fair city and reports back in a series of novels that are easily digested and self-deprecatingly funny.

Publishers Weekly says "Monkey Man" ($24 in hardcover from Intrigue Press) is something like the seventh Bubba Mabry mystery. This was my first, so I'm sure I've missed the nuances (like a reference to the power of patronage in Albuquerque), but it's great fun nonetheless. Mabry has a Southern heritage but runs Bubba Mabry Investigations out of his home near the University of New Mexico. His office is, shall we say, a little unkempt, so he meets clients, like slip-and-fall attorney Marvin Pidgeon, somewhere else. Mabry favors restaurants with pastries.

It's not exactly the good life now that he had married Albuquerque Gazette reporter Felicia Quattlebaum, but better than his past existence. "For years," he tells readers, "I lived in one of the cheap neon-lit motels that dot East Central -- Old Route 66 -- before Felicia came along and made me act respectable." Felicia is a firebrand, always on the lookout for a good story, always prepared to "comfort the afflicted and afflict the comfortable." And when Mabry becomes the center of attention after a very public murder in broad daylight, his wife chews him up one side and down the other for not giving her the scoop. She's one salty reporter.

Jeff Simmons, a bean counter at the Zoo In Albuquerque (ZIA), had arranged a meeting with Mabry at one of the Flying Squirrel eateries in town to tell the PI of some alleged monkey business. Animals at the zoo seemed to be dying off at a suspiciously high rate, but before Mabry could get the details someone in a monkey suit sauntered into the restaurant, walked over to Mabry's table, and shot Jeff Simmons dead. The monkey man gets away, leaving only the ape suit behind.

Mabry wants to wash his hands of the whole mess. Maybe let his friend, police Lt. Steve Romero, handle matters. Romero is a cop's cop, smart and tough, and why wouldn't he be named "Steve"? But Romero is constantly annoyed at Mabry, who just won't go home and let the cops do their work. Especially not after Mabry is retained by Simmons' fiancé, Loretta Gonzales, Simmons' co-worker at the zoo, whose father is the founder of ArGon Foods (read "money"). She gives him a check for a couple of grand to get the investigation going. Mabry is hooked.

The reader will be, too. Brewer introduces a group of oddball zookeepers, like a curator of mammals named "Gibbons" and a zoo representative named Jim Johansen, "a handsome, tanned guy who decked himself out in safari garb. He regularly appeared on local television shows, talking up exhibits, bringing live parrots and snakes and baby crocodiles from the zoo, sometimes scaring the toupees right off the news anchors." Before he knows it, Mabry is knee-deep in monkey, uh, stuff, and he hates monkeys. There are twists and turns along the way, not least in the animal cages, and lots and lots of doorbell ringing, complication and confusion but in the end Bubba figures some things out in spite of himself.

And we readers wouldn't have it any other way.

Copyright 2006 Chico Enterprise-Record. Used by permission.
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A Truly Entertaining Read, July 11, 2008
This review is from: Monkey Man (Hardcover)
P.I. Bubba Mabry is chatting with potential client, Jeff Simmons, in a café when a gorilla walks in, pulls a gun out of the purple valise it's carrying, and shoots Jeff to death. You've got to love an opening like that.

Jeff had wanted Bubba to find out why so many animals were dying at the zoo where Jeff worked. Certain that Jeff was murdered because of illegal activities at the zoo, his fiancée, also a zoo employee, hires Bubba to pursue the investigation.

Steve Brewer's mystery, Monkey Man, is a delightful read. The zoo setting intrigued me, and given Bubba's monkey phobia (you'll have to read the book to learn how the phobia started) and loathing of snakes, the zoo scenes are funny. Add to the mix, his no-nonsense reporter wife, Felicia, her perky and annoying intern, Julie, weird zoo people, and the infinitely patient Lieutenant Steve Romero, and you've got a truly entertaining whodunit. I'm not sure I'll ever look at zoos quite the same way. Oh, and no animals were harmed in this novel, so relax and enjoy.


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5.0 out of 5 stars Absolutely a Treat, July 25, 2011
By 
This review is from: Monkey Man (Hardcover)
I fell totally in love with this book. I laughed like crazy, cheered for the monkey man, and wondered throughout about the workings of Steve Brewer's mind. What kind of marvelous genius thinks these things up? My next act was to go order the rest of the books he has written. My summer reading is now ready.
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