Wild Pitch

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Wild Pitch

A. B. Guthrie Jr.

240 pages

Paperback

April 2010

978-0-8032-3029-3

$18.95 Add to Cart

About the Book

After Buster Hogue is shot at the annual town picnic, plenty of motives appear, but no clues point to the sniper. A lot of people had reason to dislike Hogue or even to wish him dead because of personal and unhappy experience, but grudges don’t count in the absence of evidence.
 
Chick Charleston, the small-town Montana sheriff, has had no experience with this kind of case, the county not having been inclined to homicidal endeavors. Neither does his county office have the gadgets to ferret out the criminal. But he has patience, persistence, a sense of humor, and a sharp understanding of human nature. He also has a keen assistant in seventeen-year-old Jason Beard, pitcher for the Midbury baseball team and amateur detective, who takes notes and acts as Watson to Charleston’s Holmes. In the violent and surprising finale, young Jase plays a saving hand.
 
There is humor in these pages, even earthy hilarity, but at no cost to mystery and suspense. Against the western background he knows so well, A. B. Guthrie Jr. has created a very human and believable sleuth in Chick Charleston, and in Jason Beard a singularly engaging narrator, whose accounts of local characters such as Loose Lancaster, Doc Yak, and old Mrs. Jenkins are guaranteed to entertain the reader.

Author Bio

A. B. Guthrie Jr. (1901–91) was a historian and novelist whose 1949 book The Way West won the Pulitzer Prize for fiction. He is the author of several other western mysteries, including The Genuine Article, No Second Wind, Playing Catch-Up, and Murder in the Cotswolds, all soon to be available in Bison Books editions.

Praise

“A tightly plotted, beautifully worked-out example of the detective story.”—New York Times Book Review

“It’s tough, taut, and terrific.”—Saturday Review

“Guthrie is a literary artist. . . The characters in Wild Pitch are as real as your neighbors.”—Kansas City Star

“An exciting mystery that can be read for its human values as much as for crime solving. such fiction is rare nowadays.”—Los Angeles Times

“A good yarn, told in Guthrie’s unique style.”—Denver Post

Table of Contents

[no TOC; 21 numbered chapters]

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