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[FKA]⇒ PDF Always a Cold Deck A Harry Reese Mystery Book 1 edition by Robert Bruce Stewart Literature Fiction eBooks

Always a Cold Deck A Harry Reese Mystery Book 1 edition by Robert Bruce Stewart Literature Fiction eBooks



Download As PDF : Always a Cold Deck A Harry Reese Mystery Book 1 edition by Robert Bruce Stewart Literature Fiction eBooks

Download PDF Always a Cold Deck A Harry Reese Mystery Book 1  edition by Robert Bruce Stewart Literature  Fiction eBooks

In July 1900, hapless insurance investigator Harry Reese travels to Buffalo to look into a suspicious fire. But when Harry uncovers a smuggling ring, the case morphs into something more sinister, and he’s faced with a new set of questions. What’s become of the notorious ringleader? Was the missing Charles Elwell killed for the insurance money? Or is he alive and sharing in the proceeds? And is his comely niece merely trying to divert Harry’s attention—or is she truly as eccentric as she appears?

To find the answers, Harry travels to Canada and back in the company of a political boss’s conniving stooge and the aforementioned nutty niece. It’s a byzantine odyssey, during which Harry can never be sure of anyone’s loyalties, least of all those who’ve hired him. And when it’s all over, he finds himself wedded to a new conundrum, which makes what went before pale in comparison….

For more information on the series, please visit HarryReeseMysteries.com

Always a Cold Deck A Harry Reese Mystery Book 1 edition by Robert Bruce Stewart Literature Fiction eBooks

Meet Harry Reese, the guy who has a very boring work: he is an independent insurance investigator; only it is never boring with his doing the investigations. The moment his future wife joins the said investigations promptly move from lighthearted (the guy does not take himself seriously) to absurdly funny as her enthusiasm in joining the fun and crazy unconventional schemes to get the results often lends them both in very unusual situations - think Lucy Ricardo from the old I Love Lucy sitcom and her desire to be in the show.

This time Harry - a resident of Brooklyn - is sent to Buffalo to investigate a fire that destroyed a grain elevator - insured for a large sum of money, obviously. During his investigations he stumbles upon missing people, seemingly dead people, smugglers, and his future wife.

The first thing to say about the book is it is very easy read. The writing style made it so with no clumsy or heavy sentence structure. The fast-moving plot helps as well. The mystery part is quite good, the humor part is well done, but I would not mind for it to be present in a greater degree. Having read two next books of the series I can say that the second one has better mystery and the third has much better humor, but this book makes a nice job of introducing the new characters and setting up their relationships. Sufficient to say I was never bored while reading it.

As I already mentioned this is the first book of the series and as such has some minor rough edges which can be easily overlooked considering that the series improve as they go along. It is available for free from several places including Amazon.

The final rating would be 3.5 stars rounded up for being the author's first published work and the fact that it successfully accomplished the main goal of the first book of a mystery series: character introduction and making its readers interested in them.

Product details

  • File Size 3802 KB
  • Print Length 290 pages
  • Publisher Street Car Mysteries (May 29, 2012)
  • Publication Date May 29, 2012
  • Sold by  Digital Services LLC
  • Language English
  • ASIN B008G372EU

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Always a Cold Deck A Harry Reese Mystery Book 1 edition by Robert Bruce Stewart Literature Fiction eBooks Reviews


The book starts of a little rambling and there are a lot of characters. I wouldn't say the characters are developed by one dimensional seems wrong too- underdeveloped maybe? The things about this book is that the author chose a setting that is not often written about (1900s New York). Its something like a British historical cozy, only in America.
Unfortunately, I departed from my usual practice and read the third in the series first. I am sure this book deserves a a 5 star rating, but reading it after the third in the series, I would have rated it a 4 star. Robert Bruce Stewart writes a delightful series of uncomplicated books and short stories featuring either Harry Reese or his wife, Emmie, or both. They live in the simpler times of street cars and parasols. They also live in perilous times of insurance fraud and murder. In this book, we see Harry investigating a possible insurance fraud that turns out to be part of a much larger scheme. He meets Emmie and you will have to read the rest of the book to find out what happens. I am enjoying these books so much that I have purchased all of Robert Bruce Stewart's Streetcar Mysteries series. Five Stars!!!!!!
This is wonderful at what it is. It will not change your life or give you insight on your purpose for living. It is a funny, smart, intelligent romp with some great characters and a keen insight into its times. I loved every page. I had just read some very beautiful but weighty novels and this was a great gulp of fun. I promptly bought the next two in the series and gobbled them up. I am on to more weighty meaningful novels and after a couple I will dip back into the rest of this series.
The plot was inventive and engaging. The characters are one-dimensional. Most of the dialogue is between the author and the reader as we are told what we need to know rather than allow the characters' actions/words/deeds lead us to 'see' what we need to know. I suspect I would have enjoyed the locales had the settings been fleshed out. I heard more about the price of food than I did the era-specific items that would have made the places real and the actions understandable.
A great read to get to know more about Harry Reese, an insurance investigator. He was outwitted by his future wife on trying to solve the crimes that was not too straight forward. Without Emmie (his future wife), level headed in understanding the nature of the crime, Harry will never see his reward. I suggested that you read this to understand the methodology used by Harry at the turn of the century. You will never wanted to put this book down.
. . . in the North Atlantic on passenger ships. Occasionally it’s on passenger trains in the area between Buffalo and Toronto. This is the book where Harry Burgess, sent to investigate a suspicious fire, meets and marries Emmie McGinnis, probably, like the reader, asking himself, “How’d that happen?” I don’t know whether this tells us more about Harry’s laid-back personality or Emmie’s delightful manipulations, but whichever we focus on, we are delighted with both process and outcome. Arson, faked deaths, mistresses, bigamy, champagned courtships, cheating at cards, actual murders, all in the frame! Harry is great at collecting the facts and connecting the dots, and Emmie is even greater, as her notebook will prove, at seeing all the possibilities, then injecting herself into the action in a clever way that advances the cause of the two young investigators. Stewart’s description of their relationship is, “These two share a quirky, symbiotic relationship based on mutual amusement and unblemished by sentiment.” True, and truly entertaining! More! More! Encore!
Harry Reese is a bit down on his heel insurance investigator. He is in Buffalo about the possible fraud in a grain silo fire. He finds a strange cellar no one claims. The company has a sordid past with partners involved in stock fraud and disappearances. He leverages his hunches into a contract to find two of them. Along the way he makes friends with the niece of one of the missing men who supposedly died at sea. Many threads and some unsolved points were adding to the madcap feel. The unresolved points were annoying. Entertaining duo not sure the side characters were greatly drawn but good first outing
Meet Harry Reese, the guy who has a very boring work he is an independent insurance investigator; only it is never boring with his doing the investigations. The moment his future wife joins the said investigations promptly move from lighthearted (the guy does not take himself seriously) to absurdly funny as her enthusiasm in joining the fun and crazy unconventional schemes to get the results often lends them both in very unusual situations - think Lucy Ricardo from the old I Love Lucy sitcom and her desire to be in the show.

This time Harry - a resident of Brooklyn - is sent to Buffalo to investigate a fire that destroyed a grain elevator - insured for a large sum of money, obviously. During his investigations he stumbles upon missing people, seemingly dead people, smugglers, and his future wife.

The first thing to say about the book is it is very easy read. The writing style made it so with no clumsy or heavy sentence structure. The fast-moving plot helps as well. The mystery part is quite good, the humor part is well done, but I would not mind for it to be present in a greater degree. Having read two next books of the series I can say that the second one has better mystery and the third has much better humor, but this book makes a nice job of introducing the new characters and setting up their relationships. Sufficient to say I was never bored while reading it.

As I already mentioned this is the first book of the series and as such has some minor rough edges which can be easily overlooked considering that the series improve as they go along. It is available for free from several places including .

The final rating would be 3.5 stars rounded up for being the author's first published work and the fact that it successfully accomplished the main goal of the first book of a mystery series character introduction and making its readers interested in them.
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