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Scavenger Hunt

Scavenger Hunt

List Price: $13.00
Your Price: $9.75
Product Info Reviews

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Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Outstanding
Review: I rarely get sucked into a book the way I did by this one. Congradulations Robert Ferrigno, this is an absulote page turner. Good character development with many twists and turns to the storyline. This book is exactly what a mystery should be, believable and hard core content.

Thank you

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: This book will be on my Top Ten Best of 2003 list!
Review: It's just the end of January 2003 as I sit here with snow on the ground and Robin Mink on the CD player, so you have to understand that it's way too early to be making statements like the one I'm going to make. I can't help it, though. I'm going to go ahead and predict that, come December, Robert Ferrigno's novel SCAVENGER HUNT is going to be on my Top Ten Best of 2003 list.

I know, I know --- it's tough to make a prediction like that so early in the year. But SCAVENGER HUNT is the book that Ferrigno's legion of followers has been waiting for. It is not merely a great Ferrigno book or even a great mystery. It is a great novel, period. It has all of the elements: tight plotting, memorable prose and characters that leap off of the page and into your world. It's a book that you swim in and maybe drown in, as opposed to wade through. Readable? Hah! Try to stop!

SCAVENGER HUNT brings intrepid SLAP reporter Jimmy Gage back for another go-round. SCAVENGER HUNT is not a sequel to FLINCH, where we first met Gage; no, SCAVENGER HUNT stands quite well on its own. Ferrigno fleshes Gage out and goes deeper into his character, making him more three-dimensional and ultimately more likable. This time around, Gage is on a Hollywood party scavenger hunt when he encounters Garrett Walsh, a former movie director flavor-of-the-month whose career abruptly came to an end when he was arrested for the rape and murder of an underage girl. Walsh pled guilty and, under the terms of a plea bargain, spent seven years in prison. Newly released, Walsh feels that Gage is just the ticket to help him clear his name. He plans to refurbish his reputation through Fall Guy, a movie script he is working on and that he swears will tell the story of how he was set up. Just a couple of weeks after they meet, however, Gage finds Walsh dead in a fishpond, apparently having drowned while intoxicated. Gage's reporting instincts immediately kick in --- Walsh's story of being set up has the ring of truth to it and his accidental death, while convenient with his unfortunate drug use, is just a bit too convenient. What Gage doesn't know, however, is that his investigation is attracting the notice of the wrong people and putting him squarely in the crosshairs of danger.

Ferrigno does a simply incredible job of misdirection here, yet he plays fair every step of the way. I thought I had SCAVENGER HUNT figured out a number of times and was totally wrong more than once. Ferrigno also does an incredible job of pacing, dropping major and minor bombs throughout SCAVENGER HUNT from the beginning to the end. All of the characters, from the one-page walk-ons to the major players, are interesting and real. And wait until you encounter Sugar. Just wait. This is an unforgettable book, filled with unforgettable characters.

--- Reviewed by Joe Hartlaub

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: A Sugar High
Review: Jimmy Gage is back from 'Flinch' still digging up dirt for SLAP magazine. His boss Nino Napitano, a high powered guy who thrives on life at the fringes of propriety, stages a high profile scavenger hunt where the winning team must return with a major Oscar. Jimmy, his hustling computer geek friend Rollo and the Monelli twins meet the challenge after connecting with Garrett Walsh, a flash in the pan director who won two Oscars seven years before. Walsh now lives in a trailer, just out of prison after serving out his plea bargain deal for the rape / murder of fifteen-year-old Heather Grimm.

A more subtle connection to the title emerges as Ferrigno writes the rest of the story. In his quest to find out what really happened to Garrett Walsh, Jimmy seems to be on a scavenger hunt of his own finding an array of fascinating bit part players, most only in the picture for one chapter. Characters like:

the Monelli twins: bimbos with brains, maybe;
the Butcher: a one-on-one basketball maniac;
Cheri: an aspiring actress who defines the outer limits of self-absorbion;
Trunk: an ex-vice cop dying of cancer who is perfectly out of place on a posh golf course;
the man in a wheelchair and Serena the maid whose lives center around a flea bag motel.

Just as he is a master at providing a pigeon's eye view of the undercarriage of life in Southern California, Ferrigno also creates tension that will jolt his reader to a new level of awareness. Wait until you read the last three words of Chapter 19.

Though I hated the ending, I love the way Ferrigno writes and still give 'Scavenger Hunt' a solid five stars. Everything else more than made up for it.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: A Body in the Pond is no Accident
Review: Looking for an Oscar on a scavanger hunt in L.A. cynical magazine writer Jimmy Gage comes to the door of Garrett Walsh, who had been a boy genius filmmaker. Walsh has just finished serving a prison sentence for killing a teenage girl. He has a new screenplay about a brilliant director framed for murder, what else, and once he finds out who Gage is, he asks for his help.

But before Gage can do anything for the director, Walsh is found floating in a carp pond, dead. The police say accident, Gage doesn't think so and he starts investigating.

Robert Ferrigno is one of my favorite writers. He writes with wit and style, painting unforgettable characters in wild, wooly, urban Southern California and this book is no exception. We get tough guys who aren't so tough, smart guys who aren't so smart, hustlers and a murderer. And we get one of Ferrigno's best.

Review submitted by Captain Katie Osborne

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: delightful Hollywood noir
Review: Reporter Jimmy Gage works the Hollywood beat for SLAP magazine, a "tabloid" known for trying to live up to its name. Jimmy interviews Garrett Walsh upon the release of the Oscar-winning director from prison after spending seven years incarcerated for the grim murder of a teenage actress. The most interesting point in the exchange occurs when Walsh, still insisting he is innocent, informs the journalist that he has written the screenplay for a movie about the real incident.

Cynical Jimmy assumes that either Garret is in denial or like every other convict just says he is innocent until someone murders Walsh and his screenplay "The Fall Guy" turns up missing. Unable to resist a follow-up story, Jimmy cynically works the underside of the movie industry compelled to learn the truth that he begins to believe never surfaced in the injustice of a courtroom.

SCAVENGER HUNT is a Hollywood noir those sub-genre fans will appreciate because of the deep nature of the key players. For instance, the antihero is sort of a modern Sam Spade combining deep-rooted cynicism with a strong moral fiber. The support cast such as his unsure "partner" and a kick butt policewoman provides depth to understanding Jimmy. Ironically the readers will know who did what before the reporter solves the two deaths, but the audience will fully relish the engaging return of this protagonist. (see FLINCH).

Harriet Klausner

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: He's baaaaack
Review: Robert Ferrigno wrote Horse Latitudes and then followed it with the brilliant Heartbreaker, which stands alone as great mystery noir. Then we didn't hear from him for awhile. That hiatus was followed by Flinch. I did not care for Flinch. I imagine I didn't care for Jimmy Gage. He seemed trite and superficial.

Perhaps another author would start anew but Mr. Ferrigno rewrote Jimmy. And this Jimmy, well let's say that Spenser, Elvis and Dave Robicheaux have nothing on him.

The story opens innocuously enough on a scavenger hunt authored by the bizarre and wealthy editor (and Jimmy's boss) of Slap Magazine, Nino. Read eccentric. Read wierd. But read interesting. All of Ferrigno's characters are interesting. The sexy Holt, the brash and abusive (but with a heart of gold) Katz, Rollo, the murder victim Walsh, all of them.

What's fascinating about Jimmy Gage is that he now has great depth and great range. He's fearless, he's loyal and he's committed.

Walsh is killed; Jimmy blames himself for not listening to all the warning signs. (See Bogart in The Long Goodbye.) He can't let go of the incongruities.

Twists. Turns. False discoveries. Irrelevant Kung Fu masters and Baskeball players. Violent confrontations and searing sex. Ferrigno makes you feel uncomfortable. And then there is Sugar. Whew. Sugar really makes you feel uncomfortable.

Whodunit? Fooled me. A great novel. A keeper.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Loved it!
Review: Robert Ferrigno's "Scavenger Hunt" is a subtle, darkly mesmerizing Hollywood tale of murder, ambition, frame-ups, set-ups, double-crosses and clever sleuthing.

After serving seven years, Oscar winning producer Garrett Walsh is determined to prove his innocence. His vehicle is what he terms, the "most dangerous screenplay in Hollywood." Walsh wants SLAP magazine's cynical, skeptical, irreverent, high profile reporter Jimmy Gage to publicize the screenplay, before someone attempts to silence him permanently.

Jimmy fails to buy in. But, when Walsh is found floating in his koi pond and the screenplay missing, Jimmy doubts it was the accidental death the police claim.

No one shares Jimmy's thesis except his nefarious pal Rollo. Together they work their way thru a colorful cast of quirky Hollywood types, and around the cops who consider the case closed.

The plot is superb: sophisticated, solid, circuitous and overflowing with scintillating dialogue.

Mr. Ferrigno withholds enough info to keep surprises coming and the pages turning. The pace never slackens, and the accelerating danger of the killer keeps the tenseness at a high pitch.

A delightful read. Hooray for Hollywood!

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Looking for a good read? Your hunt is over.
Review: The last item Jimmy Gage and his team needs to complete their scavenger hunt is an Oscar. No problem. His buddy Rollo knows where to find two... in the possession of Garrett Walsh, a director recently released from seven years in prison for a murder he committed in a drug haze. Or did he?

Walsh knows Jimmy is a writer for SLAP magazine so he tries to convince him to write an article proclaiming Walsh's innocence. He claims to have received a letter that convinced him he was framed. Now he wants to produce a new movie that will not only establish his innocence, but names the high profile murderer. Jimmy doubts the story until Walsh's body is found floating in a koi pond. Now Jimmy's off on his own scavenger hunt, for the truth.

Scavenger Hunt is a tightly written, darkly funny trek across Southern California. It's a pleasure to see many of the characters back from their debut in Flinch as well as to meet the new characters. What makes them so likable (besides Ferrigno's great sense of humor) is that the good guys aren't all good and the bad guys aren't all bad. Just like real life. This book has enough twists and turns to keep you wondering, enough surprises to keep you up a little too late at night reading. The only thing left to wonder when you reach the end is, when's Ferrigno's next book due out.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Memorable bad guy
Review: This moves when the bad guy is on the page. Gather this one up for an enjoyable summer read.


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