Meet Bailey Crane, a transplanted son of the south with Cherokee blood and some emotional baggage. Bailey is an auxiliary detective, has a manufacturing rep business that brings in easy money, and he's a part-time actor. Bailey's got golf, love, money, friends, and a great life style. He has an amusing personality. He's a rowdy good looking rogue who wears his feelings in his eyes and on his lips, not at all reluctant to share his world.
A lovely young model and mother is brutally murdered in the Arizona desert northeast of Phoenix. The lady was Bailey's friend and her homicide begins an adventure for our sleuth that will take him down the halls of our nation's capital where he will discover that fact and fiction are strange bedfellows. Chased by an unknown stalker with a gun, Bailey is a marked man. Wounded, his body battered and bruised, his anger pushes onward until the puzzle pieces begin to form a picture. The exciting climax has a unique twist, and our musing son of the south does not quite know it but the ending is also a beginning.
The book was inspired by the actual murder many years ago of the author's friend and fellow actor.
QUOTE FROM THE BOOK:
"It was the most tense yet ludicrous scene my mind had ever recorded. There were nine cops with guns drawn standing over an absurdly quiescent public enemy while a fierce femme fatale stood ten feet away, lifting a bottle of bourbon to her lips."
- Graduate of Lycoming College (Williamsport, PA) - BA English
- Actor in film, stage, television
- Honorably and proudly served in the United States Navy
- Taught school (Advanced Writing)
- Worked in Sales and Marketing for major textbook publishers
- Owned and ran a business
- Author of 14 books, with one more in the oven
- Recently moved from The Sea of Cortez with wife, Julie Anne, and 'George' (a Bengal cat with some serious attitude). Now live in the bluegrass rolling hills of Kentucky.
I read this book via an Amazon-US KINDLE Unlimited Download.
As a voracious Book Reviewer, as well as a True Crime Enthusiast [check the badge on my Amazon profile] I was drawn to download and read this book, for which I’m now writing a review for.
The author, Billy Chitwood, in writing this book has shown a defined determination that all of characters and their emotions are as real as real can be, for this story is based on a True Crime Murder, a murder in which his wife’s friend had been the murder victim.
The murder victim, Catherine Gibbs, had worked for two of the protagonist’s, Bailey Crane, friends and had been seen by him at his friend’s place of business early of the last day she was alive. Crane’s dogged dedication in resolving the murder had been caused in part two kids had disfigured head/face of the victim and that she had been his ex-wife’s friend. Once a possible suspect, Steve Langford, is identified, Crane’s sleuth mindedness kicks in as it starts to piece each additional tidbit of information. As is the case when the suspect fears they’re closing in on him, Crane has become a target, being pursued by an unknown assailant who has already beaten him up. This causes him to become angry and more determined than ever in solving this murder. With what seems to have been ever unending stream of incongruous twists in the storyline, Crane ultimately solve the murder he’s been involved with in Washington, D.C., and for good measure a second murder as well. For having given this true crime story aficionado, and other readers, an intense truth-based fictional murder mystery, I’m giving this endeavor by Mr. Chitwood 5 STARS.
Based on a real murder, this crime mystery grabs hold of readers and doesn’t let go. Chitwood is masterful in conveying tough emotions and building suspense. His descriptive detail is excellent, his dialogues natural. I wanted justice, anyone who reads this book will want justice – will demand justice. A woman is murdered in the middle of the desert. Why? Who could do such a thing? Chitwood offers clues, takes them away, offers more clues through one suspect after another. If you’re like me, you’ll read late into the night, because you need to solve the mystery.
Billy Ray Chitwood has written a fiction novel about a true crime.
Billy describes Bailey Crane as a transplanted son of the south. He says there are still a few words that will give his heritage away, like the word help that may come out as hep. Reading the story, I suddenly realized I couldn't tell where Billy Chitwood ended and his main character, Bailey Crane, began. Somehow, I think the two may have a great deal in common.
Catherine Gibbs, the murdered woman, had no idea as she started her morning that this was going to be her last day on earth. She kissed her daughter, and son good-by, hugged her mom, and headed out the door thinking things were right with her world. Cathy Gibbs worked for two of Bailey's friends and she and Bailey had become casual buddies. When Bailey saw her that last morning, at his friend's place of business, he noticed her face having such a happy glow. He kept remembering how she looked that morning, and then hearing how two kids found her the next day with her head and face bashed in by a rock. It was that, and the fact that she was his wife's friend that made Bailey determined to help solve her murder. Cathy met Steve Langford, her boy-friend, after work and they went to dinner. He was the last know person to see her alive, making him the police's number one suspect, and also Bailey Crane's as well. Rumor had it, they were fighting that night. To know more, you need to read the story.
I enjoyed this book. It had a great deal to do with Chitwood's sayings and the way he told the story. Sometimes he made me smile and sometimes he made me laugh out loud. Of course these are things said from Bailey Crane's perspective. An example would be Bailey Crane describing a rough night out and the way he looked the next morning. "My eyes looked like two weak and damaged headlights on a ugly foggy morning."
As for me,I'm looking forward to reading more books from Chitwood. All I can say is, rock on Bailey Crane.
Once You Crack This Book Open, You're Not Going To Want To Close It!
I just kept coming back to it because I had to know what was going to happen next. Why would someone drag a beautiful woman out into the desert and kill her and why does her old friend Bailey Crane keep having to look over his shoulder? Was the next attempt on his life going to be successful? Of course not as there are more bailey Crane Mysteries to follow, but still...
This is the first novel I've read by Billy Ray Chitwood and I truly enjoyed it. I'll be back for more of Bailey Crane.