Nothing to Lose

Fiction & Literature, Humorous, Mystery & Suspense
Cover of the book Nothing to Lose by Jim Sanderson, TCU Press
View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart
Author: Jim Sanderson ISBN: 9780875655796
Publisher: TCU Press Publication: May 31, 2014
Imprint: Texas Christian University Press Language: English
Author: Jim Sanderson
ISBN: 9780875655796
Publisher: TCU Press
Publication: May 31, 2014
Imprint: Texas Christian University Press
Language: English

Roger Jackson is a grouch. He drinks too much with the wrong sorts of people. He dislikes where he lives—Beaumont, Texas, a small, humid southeast Texas town caught between a marsh and an impenetrable forest, between racial and social strife, between rival versions of Jesus. He dislikes his job—taking photos of cheating spouses. He dislikes his past. (He could have been a lawyer.) And now, he finds himself entangled in a crime. 
 
When the police find an aging ex-hippie dead from bullet wounds to the head and torso, they find Roger’s photos and want his help. Surrounded by a cast of colorful characters, Roger must do his job while maneuvering around the dangerous agendas of those around him. But the greatest obstacle is the recurring cocaine trail leading to Jewel McQueen, a small-time crook, who is guarded by his sociopathic brother, Sunshine McQueen, who hears voices from Jesus, Satan, and his mother. Jewell will stop at nothing—even murder—to keep his demented brother out of prison.
 
Roger must leave the enclosed suburbs with their exclusive, prim, cleaned-up Jesus and cheap cocaine and liquor habits and, with his new partners, venture “behind the pine curtain,” into the deep Piney Woods with its wild, unruly Pentecostal Jesus and meth-lab economy and mentality.

View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart

Roger Jackson is a grouch. He drinks too much with the wrong sorts of people. He dislikes where he lives—Beaumont, Texas, a small, humid southeast Texas town caught between a marsh and an impenetrable forest, between racial and social strife, between rival versions of Jesus. He dislikes his job—taking photos of cheating spouses. He dislikes his past. (He could have been a lawyer.) And now, he finds himself entangled in a crime. 
 
When the police find an aging ex-hippie dead from bullet wounds to the head and torso, they find Roger’s photos and want his help. Surrounded by a cast of colorful characters, Roger must do his job while maneuvering around the dangerous agendas of those around him. But the greatest obstacle is the recurring cocaine trail leading to Jewel McQueen, a small-time crook, who is guarded by his sociopathic brother, Sunshine McQueen, who hears voices from Jesus, Satan, and his mother. Jewell will stop at nothing—even murder—to keep his demented brother out of prison.
 
Roger must leave the enclosed suburbs with their exclusive, prim, cleaned-up Jesus and cheap cocaine and liquor habits and, with his new partners, venture “behind the pine curtain,” into the deep Piney Woods with its wild, unruly Pentecostal Jesus and meth-lab economy and mentality.

More books from TCU Press

Cover of the book In Their Shoes by Jim Sanderson
Cover of the book Amado Muro and Me by Jim Sanderson
Cover of the book To Hell or the Pecos, a novel by Jim Sanderson
Cover of the book Yours in Filial Regard by Jim Sanderson
Cover of the book Comanche Sundown by Jim Sanderson
Cover of the book Chili Queen by Jim Sanderson
Cover of the book Texas People, Texas Places by Jim Sanderson
Cover of the book A Walk Across Texas by Jim Sanderson
Cover of the book Plum Creek by Jim Sanderson
Cover of the book Sundays with Ron Rozelle by Jim Sanderson
Cover of the book The Norton Trilogy by Jim Sanderson
Cover of the book The Women of Smeltertown by Jim Sanderson
Cover of the book History of Texas Christian University by Jim Sanderson
Cover of the book Nashville Burning by Jim Sanderson
Cover of the book Lay Bare the Heart by Jim Sanderson
We use our own "cookies" and third party cookies to improve services and to see statistical information. By using this website, you agree to our Privacy Policy