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Quint McCauley #2

Error In Judgment

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'Brod's settings and dialogue are realistic and believable.' - Publishers Weekly. Police Chief Ed Carver makes no bones about wanting to run privateinvestigator Quint McCauley out of town when a Circuit Judge is found dead and it emerges that Quint has an interest in the policeinvestigation. Carver seems anxious to classify Markham's death as suicide but Quint has been hired by Markham's widow, who stands to gain a million dollars in insurance payments if he can prove it's murder. Qunit, who finds support in some new and unlikely companions, uncovers a trail of corruption and tragedy.

544 pages, Hardcover

First published August 28, 1991

14 people want to read

About the author

D.C. Brod

14 books12 followers
DC Brod, author of Getting Lucky, has written fiction most of her life, but didn't think she had a novel in her until she graduated from Nothern Illinois University with an MA in journalism. It was then that she decided if she could spend 120 pages discussing postal oppression of the radical press, she could write a novel. She was right.

"Caper fans will relish Brod's offbeat stand-alone thriller. Illinois freelance writer Robyn Guthrie can no longer afford to keep her elderly mother, Lizzie, in an assisted living facility. Desperate to come up with the cash somehow, Robyn considers a variety of illegal acts. In the end, she seeks to kill two birds with one stone by trying to retrieve a large amount of Lizzie's savings that were lost in a real estate scam from the con man responsible, Bull Severn. Fortunately, Robyn's shady accountant, ex-jockey Mick Hughes, has access to Bull and, more importantly, to Bull's prize possession, a racehorse called Bull's Blood. Mick, who has financial troubles of his own, takes seriously Robyn's half-baked notion of holding Sassy, a goat to whom Bull's Blood is emotionally attached, for ransom. Brod (Heartstone) expertly blends suspenseful action with characters readers will care for, in particular her sympathetic and plausible lead."
-- Publishers Weekly (Starred Review)

". . . In the end, though, what stands out most is the surprisingly affecting portrait of a woman caught in the midst of a parent's sad but sure mental decline."
-- Booklist

"Brod expertly blends suspenseful action with characters readers will care for, in particular the sympathetic and plausible lead."
-- Publishers Weekly on Getting Sassy





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