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David Reichart
Author
Every Able Body

Adult; Mystery/Thriller; (Market)

Sally McGinn was sixteen, beautiful, innocent. Maybe she was too innocent to realize that in 1943 Mobile was not the gentile, provincial Southern gem she expected it to be. The steamy Gulf Coast city was under siege by thousands who had left the backwoods and overworked cotton fields for booming wartime shipyards. Many of the newcomers lived in shantytowns and tent cities. Sewage and garbage problems caused rumors of typhoid; juvenile delinquency and venereal disease were out of control, and out on the streets pretty girls were disappearing. Sally should never have gone downtown on a school night.
Reviews
Publishers Weekly

A genuinely creepy villain is the best part of this average thriller set in Mobile, Ala., in 1943. Former football star and ex-cop Frank “Truck” Lundy now works as a PI, having been rendered physically unfit for military service. Lundy’s path crosses that of the psychopathic Claude Gagnon, leader of the Calibis, a scary group of swamp people rumored to engage in cannibalism. Gagnon adds white slavery to his criminal resume, abducting three women for sale to a South American man. Lundy’s efforts to stop Gagnon are aided by Valerie Gilbreath, a reporter who, conveniently for the kidnapping plot line, is herself a very attractive woman. Valerie’s interactions with both Lundy and Gagnon follow predictable lines. Reichart (Annalisa’s Highway Blues) does a decent job of portraying life on the home front down South, complete with racial tensions, and while the maverick private investigator is a familiar figure, Lundy has enough personality to sustain a series. (BookLife)

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