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'one of the most entertaining regional mysteries on the market today.' — Book Browser

Flap Tucker thinks he’s got it all worked out.

A meditating private eye with curious cosmic talents, Flap prides himself on his ability to step back and put two and two together.

But when threatening notes start to turn up at his dear friend Dalliance Oglethorpe’s door – along with grisly packages promising worse to come – Flap suddenly finds himself caught up in a personal case he can’t step back from.

And with Dally acting strangely, Flap soon realizes there is a lot to this world he doesn’t know.

There’s also a lot he needs to find out about himself and the woman he thought he knew best.

A body shows up in the middle of the night and moments later, a man is gunned down right outside the door.

Dally assumes Flap has a hand in the murder. And Flap has equal reason to suspect Dally herself.

In a frantic quest to resolve their strained relationship, Flap delves wildly into their past in which he recovers old flames, finds new clients and sees through the worst of disguises.

If he and Dally are to make it through the long, dark night, Flap must find the real killer, the real motive, and the real truth behind Dally’s lost years.

Will he be able to work it out in time before the deadly past catches up with them?

Dead Easy is a gripping mystery thriller and the fifth in the Flap Tucker mystery series.


Praise for the Flap Tucker series:

“Magical.” — The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

“The Flap Tucker mysteries are real jewels. Phillip DePoy has style!" — Debbie Macomber, bestselling author of Moon Over Water

“This series is clearly one of the most entertaining regional mysteries on the market today.” — Harriet Klausner, Book Browser

Endeavour Press is the UK's leading independent digital publisher. For more information on our titles please sign up to our newsletter at www.endeavourpress.com. Each week you will receive updates on free and discounted ebooks. Follow us on Twitter: @EndeavourPress and on Facebook via http://on.fb.me/1HweQV7. We are always interested in hearing from our readers. Endeavour Press believes that the future is now.

232 pages, Kindle Edition

First published October 10, 2000

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About the author

Phillip DePoy

36 books84 followers
Phillip DePoy has published short fiction, poetry, and criticism in Story, The Southern Poetry Review, Xanadu, Yankee, and other magazines. He is currently the creative director of the Maurice Townsend Center for the Performing Arts at the State University of West Georgia, and has had many productions of his plays at regional theaters throughout the south. He is the recipient of numerous grants from the National Endowment for the Arts, the state of Georgia, the Georgia Council for the Arts, the Arts Festival of Atlanta, the South Carolina Council for the Arts, etc. He composed the scores for the regional Angels in America and other productions and has played in a numerous jazz and folk bands. In his work as a folklorist he has collected songs and stories throughout Georgia and has worked with John Burrison, the foremost folklorist in the south and with Joseph Cambell.

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5 stars
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4 stars
21 (30%)
3 stars
12 (17%)
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Displaying 1 - 6 of 6 reviews
2 reviews
June 8, 2023
Great read

Sparkling dialog , often containing interesting and curious thoughts and ideas. I just finished the 5th in the series and enjoyed all of them. Great and creative writing and engaging storylines.
Profile Image for Linda   Branham.
1,821 reviews30 followers
March 10, 2012
As I understand this is the last in the Flap and Dally series.
Secrets between Flap and Dally...
At four in the morning, Dally, owner of the Easy nightclub owner, calls her friend since childhood, Flap Tucker, to rush over immediately. One of his three rules of life is to come when Dally calls. He quickly arrives and takes a strange looking package from Dally. Flap opens it to see a severed hand with a note about this being the first installment. A stunned Dally tells Flap it means nothing and to stay out of it.
Instead of having Flap, a renowned investigator, make inquiries, Dally hires Jersey Jakes, a risky proposition to say the least. Meanwhile, an obnoxious patron harangues Dally at her club. Unable to stay away or leave as he has done numerous times when the commitment level seemed imminent, Flap begins his own investigation, which takes him to their mutual hometown of Invisible, Georgia in the southern side of the state. He begins to piece together her years when he fled her for the safety of the Army, not quite understanding the danger of the final installment.
As usual, DePoy's characters are wittily conceived and drawn. His plot twists are delightfully innovative. His style is filled with excellent craftsmanship, humor, sparklingly clear prose, and great concern for his readers. And I loved his snappy dialogue.
Profile Image for Brownie55.
5 reviews
Read
April 21, 2009
I enjoyed the writing style and the main character. It had twists and turns as well.
The last two paragraphs were in the 'lesson learned' catagory. In part..
One of the main things that makes us imperfect is our constant impatience with the status quo. We want change. We're restless without it. Maybe it's because we only truly understand the world by contrast. It goes on to relate the glory of sunrise against the terror of a moonless night, the love of a downpour after a drought. Contrast of opposites, including why God divided day from night, land from water, and last but not least Man from Woman. And lastly the point of why some of us like mysteries... the contrast of knowing and not knowing, questions and answers, doubt and discovery. I loved this part best
Profile Image for Roxann.
876 reviews9 followers
September 19, 2010
This was my first Flap Tucker book. It was an easy read and very entertaining. The main character Flap finds out that his long time friend and lover is married. Well she was to the guy that was murdered.He has some kind of osychic ability that helps him solve cases. (He is something of a private detective.) Very well written story with great characters and believeable plot. Dialogue was at times full of humor. I enjoyed this book and look forward to reading others in this series.
Profile Image for Susan.
7,301 reviews69 followers
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January 27, 2016
In my version too many missing spaces between the words - made it difficult to read and so I had to give up
A NetGalley book
Displaying 1 - 6 of 6 reviews

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