No one is going to mistake part-time actor, part-time Hollywood sleuth Eddie Collins for a movie star. While shooting a television commercial for Chubby's Chicken, Eddie is almost relieved when he gets a call from a motion-picture bonding company on the hook for an uncompleted film called Flames of Desire, whose female lead has died. That would be bad enough, but things get worse when Eddie finds out that the dead actress is his ex-wifeand her death looks like murder.
I’ve been an actor for the better part of the past forty years, eighteen of them walking the same streets as Eddie Collins does in Murder Unscripted.
I’m a South Dakota native. I received a BA from Augustana College in Sioux Falls, and an MA from North Dakota State University in Fargo, North Dakota.
After a 13-month stint with the U.S. Army in South Korea, I spent ten years working as a stage and commercial actor in Minneapolis, before moving to Cleveland, where I performed six seasons with the Great Lakes Shakespeare Festival. Prior to moving to Los Angeles, I spent a year at the Pacific Conservatory of the Performing Arts in Santa Maria, California.
Los Angeles credits include the movies ED WOOD, COBB, SOAPDISH, THREE FUGITIVES, BUGSY, PHANTOMS and THAT THING YOU DO! Among my television credits are “Home Improvement,” “Seinfeld,” “Ellen,” “Providence,” “thirtysomething,” “Beauty and the Beast,” and “Cheers,” where I played the only person to throw Sam Malone out of his own bar.
Murder Unscripted is my first attempt at a novel, but I have written several screenplays, one of which, “Remington Rangers,” was a 2000 semi-finalist in the Nicholl Fellowship Screenwriting competition, administered by the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences.
I currently live in southern Oregon, amidst a 1,000+ title movie collection and an extensive crime fiction library. Despite their 2011 season, I remain an avid Minnesota Twins fan, and most often am quite content to let Eddie Collins fight through the jungle entwining the Hollywood hustle.
Mixing crime and the movie biz, author and veteran actor Clive Rosengren starts his Eddie Collins mystery series with a bang. Part-time actor, part-time PI, Colin's life is complete with a secretary loaded with moxie, a small office and tiny attached apartment, a fondness for Jim Beam and beer chasers and an occasional eye for attractive women. Rosengren's Collins will have you laughing, smiling and following his every move through tinsel town and you'll want to continue the journey through his other books.
3.5. Charmingly deliberately retro--Hollywood Sam Spadeish noir. But tongue in cheek. Plus do love the whole backstage at the movies detail. Although trifle would definitely read others in the series. DPL book
Eddie Collins, like author Rosengren, is a sometimes actor who also has another profession. For Rosengren, it's writing, for Collins it's being a part-time investigator, who is happy to leave his current film gig (filming a Chubby's Chicken commercial...we learn about "spit buckets") to investigate a murder on a movie set. The victim turns out to be Collins' ex-wife, whom he has not seen in several years. Through the investigation of the murder, we learn a lot about being on a movie set, the behind the scenes Hollywood life, and the process of a murder investigation.
It's a short read (only 122 pages), but never feels contrived or rushed. This is the author's first novel, after nearly 40 years as an actor, and shows great promise for good things to come, as we follow Eddie Collins' career.
Publisher Blackstone Audio, Inc. OverDrive MP3 Audiobook File size: 121221 KB Number of parts: 4 Duration: 4 hours, 18 minutes ISBN: 9781481573320 Release date: Nov 30, 2012
read by the author
nice noir book but can't tell when it is supposed to have been set in time -- no cell phones and protagonist mentions grabbing his hat ... but something makes me think this book is set in a more contemporary time than those things indicate. i'd like to see more books with this PI ... :D
I read Murder Unscripted when it was first published in a shorter version. Loved Eddie Collins and his assistant Mavis, loved learning about back stage Hollywood. So nice to see the novel again, unbowdlerized. Clive Rosengren knows how to move the plot and develop his characters. I can hear his acting voice in the crisp dialogue he writes. If you like Hollywood and like mysteries, this is the book for you.
I reread Murder Unscripted for my book club and liked it even better this time. The story—murdered actress whose ex-husband splits his time between acting and being a private eye—was interesting though it was maybe a bit too easy to guess the ending. Rosengren’s writing is brisk and somewhat nourish and the insights into the film industry and acting profession gave the book a bit extra.
I listened to the audio version (read by the author) on a recent road trip. I thoroughly enjoyed it. Rosengren is also an actor, so he had a lot of insight into the movie industry. Mostly, I loved it because it sounded very noir, but took place in current day Hollywood. Well read. Lots of fun.
Enjoyed the book a great deal. Lots of twists and turns, clues that all come together at the end. Realistic tight character descriptions like those on a script.
Great to see the new edition of Murder Unscripted. Now with previously omitted materials. Check it out and read it again. It's an amazing start to an outstanding series.