
Death Croons the Blues
Stories of Crime and Detection
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Narrated by:
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Virtual Voice
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By:
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James Ronald

This title uses virtual voice narration
Virtual voice is computer-generated narration for audiobooks.
About this listen
Stories of Crime & Detection Volume Seven contains a novel and a novelette featuring Julian Mendoza.
Crime reporter Julian Mendoza is neither young nor good-looking, nor blue-blooded. He smokes a filthy pipe, has a marvellous landlady from Scotland, walks with a limp, is kind to down-and-outs but unkind to policemen, is rude to society ladies; and is quite prepared to do anything to ensure his reputation as the greatest crime reporter in Fleet Street.
Death Croons the Blues. Burglar Bill Cuffy breaks into blues singer Adele Valée’s apartment to steal her jewellery and cash, assuming she is at a night club performing. He stumbles across her dead body in the bathroom and is shocked to discover she has been brutally murdered. He flees the scene and ends up at reporter Julian Mendoza’s home. Cuffy is one of several murder suspects that materialise as Mendoza sets out to uncover the truth about Adele Valée’s life and discover her murderer.
Angel Face Bookmaker Harry Kemp had received a terrific beating and the police knew angelic gangster Benny Cosmano was responsible, but there was no evidence proving his guilt. Julian Mendoza swears to seek justice for the victims of the race gangs and their protection rackets.
Plus two short stories:
The Other Mr. Marquis A character study of paranoia
The Joke Twin brothers Simon and Jasper are more alike than even they realise.
JAMES JACK RONALD (1905-1972) was a prolific writer of pulp fiction, mystery stories and dramatic novels. Raised in Glasgow, Ronald moved to Chicago aged seventeen to ‘earn his fortune’, later returning to the UK to pursue a writing career. His early works were serializations and short stories syndicated in newspapers and magazines around the world. Ronald wrote under a number of pseudonyms, including Michael Crombie, Kirk Wales, Peter Gale, Mark Ellison and Kenneth Streeter among others. Several books were adapted into films, including Murder in the Family (1938), The Witness Vanishes (1939), and The Suspect (1944).
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