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C. J. Floyd #3

The Devil's Backbone

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In the third entry in this acclaimed mystery series, cheroot-smokin' African-American bail-bondsman/bounty hunter CJ Floyd investigates the disappearance of a rodeo champion and soon finds himself on a lethal trail of diamonds, greed, jealousy--and murder Print ads. 6-city author tour. Black History Month promo .

352 pages, Hardcover

First published December 12, 1971

22 people want to read

About the author

Robert Greer

25 books20 followers
Robert Greer, author of the CJ Floyd mystery series, lives in Denver, where he is a practicing surgical pathologist, research scientist, and Professor of Pathology and Medicine at the University of Colorado Health Sciences Center. He also edits the High Plains Literary Review, reviews books for National Public Radio, and raises Black Baldy cattle on his ranch near Steamboat Springs, Colorado.

Series:
* C. J. Floyd

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Displaying 1 - 6 of 6 reviews
Profile Image for George Reilly.
138 reviews12 followers
February 10, 2018
The "long-legged gal" blurb is misleading; it's only a secondary theme. The primary story is about the murder investigation, the stubborn protagonist and his messy life, the black community in Denver and beyond, a little bit of rodeo, and some Old West. The Devil's Backbone is a solidly plotted mystery with interesting characters.
764 reviews35 followers
October 11, 2009
MAY CONTAIN SPOILERS.

Black bail bondsman C.J. Floyd is the Denver-based buckaroo-influenced hero. I liked that he doesn't always have the crime theory right, but has to try out his ideas for confirmation.

I didn't expect to have Colorado diamond mining be a key plot factor (wonder if the state really does hide diamonds?)

Nor did I expect there would be black rodeo bull riders or rodeo clowns.

Some interesting women surround C.J. - his original assistant, his new hire, his girlfriend, the female black vet who's the niece of his retired bullrider friend, Morgan Williams, another black.

I'd read another book in this series. P.S. Why does 'devil" figure in so many of the titles?" (e.g., Devil's Red Nickel, Devil's Hatband.) The "backbone" in this book refers to a land formation, a ridge. Hope the others aren't all rock or landscape features.
Profile Image for Ray Pettiford.
71 reviews22 followers
November 11, 2013
CJ Floyd is fast becoming one of my favorite characters. I am looking forward to reading the remainder of Robert Greer's literary offerings.
Displaying 1 - 6 of 6 reviews

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