A Good-Looking Corpse: A Tom Tanner Mystery
<b>Tom Tanner, the crime-scene-cleaning virtuoso of <i>L.A. Rotten</i>—hailed by Dianne Emley as “eloquent, profound, hilarious, and redemptiveâ€â€”is going Hollywood. Because a psychopathic movie producer is planning a bloody blockbuster . . . with Tom in a starring role.</b><br /> <i> </i><br /> Tom Tanner has a dark past but he’s no murderer. Unfortunately, Mikey Echo—the spoiled son of the most powerful man in Hollywood—seems to think otherwise. After a young actor suffers an untimely demise out a thirty-fourth-floor window, handsome ex-con Tom is summoned to scrub the splatter below. At the scene, he learns that producer Mikey has an indecent proposal to make—and for Tom, that means signing a deal with the devil.<br />  <br /> The rotten part is, things had finally been going Tom’s way. He’s got good steady work, a feisty woman to come home to, even a little notoriety for solving a string of grisly motel murders. Now Tom just wants this mad prince of Tinseltown to leave him alone. But the fatalist within braces for the inevitable: To get Mikey Echo off his back, someone must die.<br />  <br /> <b>Praise for Jeff Klima’s <i>L.A. Rotten</i></b><br /> <b><i> </i></b><br /> “A really impressive debut . . . The book’s black humor reminded me a little of Donald E. Westlake, while the setting and dialogue could have come from Elmore Leonard. Those are two crime-writing legends whose names I don’t evoke lightly. Hopefully, <i>L.A. Rotten</i> is just the start for Jeff Klima.â€<b>—<i>Crime Fiction Lover</i></b><br />  <br /> “Eloquent, profound, hilarious, and redemptive, <i>L.A. Rotten</i> has a heart of gold.â€<b>—Dianne Emley, bestselling author of the Nan Vining mysteries</b><br /> <b> </b><br /> “A must-read novel for those who enjoy raw, ‘pulpy’ mysteries . . . Engrossing and satisfying, <i>L.A. Rotten</i> is a hard-boiled thriller that readers will be unable to put down.â€<b>—Gina Fava, author of <i>The Sculptor</i></b>