Dream town [electronic resource]. David Baldacci.
Record details
- ISBN: 9781549160615 (sound recording)
- Physical Description: 1 online resource (9 audio files) : digital
- Edition: Unabridged.
Content descriptions
Participant or Performer Note: | Narrator: Edoardo Ballerini. |
Summary, etc.: | Private investigator and World War II veteran Aloysius Archer heads to Los Angeles, the city where dreams are made and shattered, and is ensnared in a lethal case in this latest thriller in #1 New York Times bestselling author David Baldacci's Nero Award-winning series. It's the eve of 1953, and Aloysius Archer is in Los Angeles to ring in the New Year with an old friend, aspiring actress Liberty Callahan, when their evening is interrupted by an acquaintance of Callahan's: Eleanor Lamb, a screenwriter in dire straits. After a series of increasingly chilling events—mysterious phone calls, the same blue car loitering outside her house, and a bloody knife left in her sink—Eleanor fears that her life is in danger, and she wants to hire Archer to look into the matter. Archer suspects that Eleanor knows more than she's saying, but before he can officially take on her case, a dead body turns up inside of Eleanor's home . . . and Eleanor herself disappears. Missing client or not, Archer is dead set on finding both the murderer and Eleanor. With the help of Callahan and his partner Willie Dash, he launches an investigation that will take him from mob-ridden Las Vegas to the glamorous world of Hollywood to the darkest corners of Los Angeles—a city in which beautiful faces are attached to cutthroat schemers, where the cops can be more corrupt than the criminals . . . and where the powerful people responsible for his client's disappearance will kill without a moment's hesitation if they catch Archer on their trail. |
Reproduction Note: | Electronic reproduction. New York : Grand Central Publishing, 2022. Requires the Libby app or a modern web browser. |
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Subject: | Fiction. Historical Fiction. Suspense. Thriller. |
Genre: | Electronic books. |
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BookList Review
Dream Town
Booklist
From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
In the third Aloysius Archer mystery (after A Gambling Man, 2021), it's the early 1950s. A movie writer thinks someone is planning to kill her, and she wants to hire Archer, a private eye, to protect her. But before Archer can even come up with a game plan, his prospective client vanishes. Has she been murdered? Someone close to the missing woman hires Aloysius to find out. But what seems like a relatively straightforward missing-person case soon gets considerably more complicated, not to mention deadly. Baldacci's bibliography is sort of a mixed bag, with some really good books and some that read like imitations of other people's hits. With the Aloysius Archer books, though, he's found himself a winning series. Archer is a WWII veteran who spent time behind bars for a crime he didn't commit; he's a guy trying to get by in a hard world. The author mostly writes stories set in the present day, but in the Archer series, he proves a natural at handling the postwar setting. Baldacci's fans should be lining up for this one.

Publishers Weekly Review
Dream Town
Publishers Weekly
(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Bestseller Baldacci's welcome third outing for PI Aloysius Archer (after 2021's A Gambling Man) takes Archer, a decorated WWII vet who works for a detective agency in Bay Town, Calif., to Los Angeles to celebrate New Year's Eve 1952 with actress and love interest Liberty Callahan. That evening, at a restaurant frequented by such stars as Frank Sinatra and Groucho Marx, Callahan introduces Archer to her friend Eleanor Lamb, a screenwriter working on a script for Bette Davis. After Lamb learns of Archer's profession, she seeks to hire him because she's gotten middle-of-the-night--hang-up calls, and someone entered her Malibu home and left a bloody knife in her kitchen sink. Lamb's fears for her life seem justified when she disappears. Right after Archer finds an unknown man shot to death in her house, someone bludgeons the gumshoe into unconsciousness. The tension rises as his subsequent investigation places his own life in danger. Baldacci can be a bit overfond of similes and metaphors (ocean breakers hurl "their sound tentacles"), but otherwise solid prose nicely evokes the traditional hard-boiled whodunit. Raymond Chandler fans will be entertained. Agent: Aaron Priest, Aaron M. Priest Literary. (Apr.)