Two-Thirds of a Ghost, a Dr. Basil Willing Mystery, by Helen McCloy
âOne of the most enjoyable whodunits of this or any season. Reason: Its gorgeous satire on the book publishing business and the people in it or on the fringes.ââColumbus Dispatch
Amos Cottle was a valuable propertyâa first-rate novelist who produced four best sellers in four years. He had to be protected. From himself (he was an ex-alcoholic). And from his wife (she was a gold-digging siren and she spelled trouble). His publisher and his agent thought Amosâs problems were solved when they clawed the beautiful Vera out of his hair and shipped her off to Hollywood. But they were wrong. For there came a night when Vera returned. That was the night Amos had to have a drink. It was too bad he never lived to sober up.
âOne of the most entertaining mysteries of the year.ââDenver Sunday Post
âCleverly complex.ââKirkus Reviews
âExtremely enjoyableââNew York Herald Tribune
âTricky and top-notch.ââChattanooga Times
âExcellent.ââRaleigh News & Observer
Two-Thirds of a Ghost, a Dr. Basil Willing Mystery, by Helen McCloy
âOne of the most enjoyable whodunits of this or any season. Reason: Its gorgeous satire on the book publishing business and the people in it or on the fringes.ââColumbus Dispatch
Amos Cottle was a valuable propertyâa first-rate novelist who produced four best sellers in four years. He had to be protected. From himself (he was an ex-alcoholic). And from his wife (she was a gold-digging siren and she spelled trouble). His publisher and his agent thought Amosâs problems were solved when they clawed the beautiful Vera out of his hair and shipped her off to Hollywood. But they were wrong. For there came a night when Vera returned. That was the night Amos had to have a drink. It was too bad he never lived to sober up.
âOne of the most entertaining mysteries of the year.ââDenver Sunday Post
âCleverly complex.ââKirkus Reviews
âExtremely enjoyableââNew York Herald Tribune
âTricky and top-notch.ââChattanooga Times
âExcellent.ââRaleigh News & Observer