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The Witchfinder: An Amos Walker Novel (Amos Walker)

The Witchfinder: An Amos Walker Novel (Amos Walker)
Author: Loren D. Estleman
Creator: John Kenneth
Publisher: Unabridged Library Edition
Category: Book

List Price: $57.25
Buy Used: $9.97
You Save: $47.28 (83%)



New (1) Used (11) from $9.97

Avg. Customer Rating: 4.0 out of 5 stars 8 reviews
Sales Rank: 4568912

Format: Audiobook, Unabridged
Media: Audio Cassette
Edition: Unabridged
Number Of Items: 6
Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.7
Dimensions (in): 8.8 x 5.1 x 1.3

ISBN: 1567405819
Dewey Decimal Number: 813.54
EAN: 9781567405811
ASIN: 1567405819

Publication Date: May 1, 1998
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
Shipping: Expedited shipping available
Shipping: International shipping available
Condition: This is a book on cassette tape. Good condition in original clam shell case.

Also Available In:

  • Mass Market Paperback - The Witch Finder (The Amos Walker Series #13)
  • Hardcover - The Witch Finder (The Amos Walker Series #13)
  • Hardcover - The Witch Finder (The Amos Walker Series #13)
  • Hardcover - The Witch Finder (The Amos Walker Series #13)
  • Hardcover - The Witch Finder (The Amos Walker Series #13)
  • Audio Cassette - The Witch Finder (The Amos Walker Series #13)
  • Audio Cassette - The Witch Finder (The Amos Walker Series #13)
  • Audio Cassette - The Witchfinder (Amos Walker)

Similar Items:

  • A Smile on the Face of the Tiger (The Amos Walker Series #15)
  • Never Street (Amos Walker)
  • Poison Blonde (The Amos Walker Series #17)
  • Retro: An Amos Walker Novel (Amos Walker)
  • Sinister Heights (The Amos Walker Series #16)

Editorial Reviews:

Amazon.com Review
"Stuart Lund came in at six-two and three hundred pounds in gray silk tailoring with a large head of wavy yellow hair, blue eyes like wax drippings, and a black chevron-shaped moustache he hadn't bothered to bleach." That description of a lawyer who summons private detective Amos Walker to a secret meeting with Jay Bell Furlong, a world-famous architect who is supposedly dying in Los Angeles, could have come straight from Raymond Chandler. So could characters with names like Royce Grayling and Lynn Arsenault. That's why Chandler fans should rejoice that Loren D. Estleman's Walker--who first appeared in 1997's Never Street--returns in grand style in The Witchfinder. Walking the wickedly hot streets of a Detroit described as vividly and lovingly as Chandler's Los Angeles, Walker searches for the nasty parties who faked a photo that shows Furlong's much younger lady friend in bed with another man, thereby scuttling the architect's last chance for romance. Walker takes a bullet to the head, sneaks out of the hospital too early, and generally behaves as though he hasn't heard that this classic branch of the mystery tree has been declared dead by so-called experts. Other Estleman outings in paperback include Red Highway, Stamping Ground, and Stress.

Product Description
In seventeenth-century England witchfinders were bearers of false witness - and were paid handsomely for their lies. In twentieth-century America the pickings are easier, and the pay has gone through the roof. Now, a world-renowned architect, a man thought to be dying in a Los Angeles hospital, has called Amos Walker to a hotel room at Detroit Metropolitan Airport, to find the person who engineered a heartbreaking lie - and cost the architect the one woman he truly loved.

It began with a photograph that Jay Bell Furlong didn't recognize as a fake. It turned into a smashed love affair, with the master builder fleeing to the West Coast and a lonely world of fame, money, and megalomania. As soon as Walker gets the photograph in his hand and hits Detroit's heat-soaked streets, the doctored photo becomes a passport to murder. In a world of tycoons, socialites, cops, and crooks, Walker is turning over rocks in Detroit's best and worst neighborhoods. What he finds are a lot of people who had plenty of reason to hate Jay Bell Furlong. . .



Customer Reviews:   Read 3 more reviews...

5 out of 5 stars Great Series!!   March 15, 2003
This is my first Amos Walker detective novel, and I must say, Boy am I impressed! I listened to the audio version and the narrator manages to capture Amos Walker's dialog, and the dialog of the other characters with such detail, I found myself taking the long way home just to extend the listening experience!

Amos Walker, is a Detroit Private Investigator hired to discover the 'witchfinder' a person who faked an incriminating photograph of a famous architect's girlfriend. While he is investigating this case, Amos finds himself up against a whole bevy of strange and interesting characters including a hitman, a pornographer, and cops from two police departments!

Amos's one liners were really amusing, and quite unrepentant. If you haven't already done so, pick up the audio version of this book. You won't be disappointed. This book is a must for lovers of mystery fiction, or private investigatory fiction in general.


5 out of 5 stars Great story   February 10, 2002
 2 out of 2 found this review helpful

Jay Bell Furlong is a successful architect who only has a few weeks left to live. Before he dies he wants to make sure that all his affairs are in order. His biggest regret was losing the love of his life, Lily Talbot. Eight years ago, Furlong received a picture that showed Lily and another man in an uncompromising position. Feeling betrayed, Jay broke off his relationship Lily without giving her a chance to explain. Furlong recently discovered that the picture was a fake and that this lie has caused him the love of his life. He hires Amos Walker, a Detroit Private Investigator, to find out who was the instigator that wrecked his chance at happiness.

Amos Walker is a riot. He does not take guff from anyone and he has a quick mind that helps him with his detective job as well as coming up with great one-liners. Estleman explores most of the aspects in the life of Jay Bell Furlong. He introduces several of his relatives and acquaintances and shows how he affected each of their lives. He does not make Furlong to be a saint but he does a great job in developing him as a character.

The plot is well done and I did not feel lost at any point in this book. I have read some of Estleman's short stories and none of them have been very memorable to me, however I digress with his character of Amos Walker. This is the first Amos Walker novel I read and it will not be my last. One reason I consider him a winner was that I was able to understand the character without having read any of his previous adventures. I have read some novels that take readers for granted and assumes one knows everything about their main series character. This particular author does not do that and for that I am grateful.


4 out of 5 stars You'll find this Amos Walker novel to be typical   August 16, 2001
 3 out of 3 found this review helpful

The Amos Walker private detective series is one of the best ones currently going, as is also one that a reader who has never indulged can pick up any entry in the series and not feel lost. Loren Estleman has all the moves down by this time for Walker, and "The Witchfinder" is typical of the series. Walker has run-ins with the cops, gets mixed up in a homicide investigation, and comes up against an assortment of low lifes and homicidal killers, your typical day at the office. He's hired by a dying millionaire archetect to find out who "framed" the love of his life eight years ago and caused him to break off their relationship. The story takes an appropriate number of twists and turns, and as usual Walker remains uncorruptable throughout.

Though not among the best of the Walker series (that would be "Sugartown," or "The Glass Highway"), it is still a solid effort from one of the best P.I.s since Phillip Marlowe.


4 out of 5 stars Prose punching and verbal martial arts.   December 3, 1999
 2 out of 2 found this review helpful

Amos walker is a heavyweight prose puncher and a verbal jujitsu master. There are so many one-liners here that you could squash a pack mule under their combined weight. But what great one-liners! The kind of lines you write down on 3 x 5 cards and study before parties. Jab and punch phrases like, "He is so rich that the amount of his property taxes alone would keep the Third World in rice and prayer rugs for the next decade." Not a direct quote, but something close; you kinda make em' your own after a while because Amos Walker is your friend and you know he won't mind.

Yeah, OK. The one-liners distract a little, but they don't disguise how smart Amos is. He notices everything, and as Hard-Boiled fiction fate would have it, the smallest details hold the most significant revelations. This is a Motor City mystery and Amos details city life with quick sour sketches guaranteed to make you pucker with delight.

Amos is an old-school detective: He pours his own drinks-straight, packs simple heat-concealed; he's tougher than a 99 cent steak-well done, and is never more than two phone calls away from finding out anything needing finding out. If you've gone a few rounds with the likes of Chandler, Hammett, Parker or Leonard, than at least come ringside with Estleman cuz he can go the distance.


4 out of 5 stars Hey, At Least It's Better Than Blair Witch Project   September 1, 1999
 1 out of 2 found this review helpful

Amos Walker's jaunts around the Motor City are always fun reads. Estleman's descriptions of Detroit (including one character's slam of the Renaissance Center as the "Abortion on Jefferson Avenue") are gems. Even though it is obvious who the "Witchfinder" Walker is hired to find is, one is never truely disappointed for having had the opportunity to hang out with Amos. Walker is the type of guy I'd like to shoot the breeze with in some seedy Detroit bar, throwing back shots and discussing the overall baseness of mankind. I recommend all of Estleman's Amos Walker novels, particularly "Sugar Town."

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