Murder Unscripted, Review by Carl Brookins
Murder  Unscripted
by Clive  Rosengren
ISBN:  9781935797197
a 2012 release  from
Perfect Crime  Books
111 pages,  Trade Paper
Eddie Collins  is a sometime Hollywood actor and a part-time investigator. He’s cast in the old  style; a loner, divorced, he views the world through plain, cracked lenses.  Nothing rose-colored here. He’s an authentic character, one you’d be likely to  encounter on Sunset Boulevard. If you made the connection and bought him a  drink, Eddie might tell you a story. Like this one.
When the scene  opens, Eddie Collins is costumed as a cowboy, perched on a fake rock, chewing on  yet another piece of chicken. He’s doing a TV commercial for an enterprise  called Chubby’s Chicken. A telephone call to his office sends him, on behalf of  his client, a bonding company, to the set of a murder. It turns out the deceased  actress is Eddie’s former wife.
The novel  benefits hugely from the author’s background. He’s a  former theater, film and television actor who  has appeared in numerous theatrical films and television dramas. Rosengren uses  his considerable experience to infuse the novel with authenticity, but he never  slides into the bitterness or the whining of too many journey-actors who made a  living but never reached starring level. Eddie Collins has come to terms with  his career and that’s why he’s become more of an investigator than an actor.
“Murder  Unscripted,” is a short, fast, read, well-plotted and intrinsically solid. The  characters are enjoyable to follow and the final emotional twists are logical  and just right for the character and the tone of the story. I hope to see much  more of Eddie Collins in the near future.
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Carl Brookins www.carlbrookins.com http://agora2.blogspot.com, Case of the Great Train Robbery, Reunion, Red Sky
Carl Brookins www.carlbrookins.com http://agora2.blogspot.com, Case of the Great Train Robbery, Reunion, Red Sky
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