Goodbye Goliath
| Error creating thumbnail: File missing | |
| Author | Elliott Chaze |
|---|---|
| Language | English |
| Subject | Mystery Detective |
| Genre | Crime Fiction Mystery fiction |
| Publisher | Scribner, New York |
Publication date | 1983 |
| Publication place | United States |
| Media type | Print (hardcover) |
| Pages | 180 |
| ISBN | Lua error in Module:Citation/CS1/Configuration at line 2172: attempt to index field '?' (a nil value). |
| OCLC | 8929565 |
| 813.54 | |
| LC Class | PS3505.H633 G6 1983 |
Goodbye Goliath is a detective mystery novel written by American Elliott Chaze, published by Scribner, New York in 1983. It is the first of three novels featuring three recurring characters in a small Southern town: editor Kiel St. James; Crystal Bunt, Kiel's young photographer girlfriend; and Chief of Detectives Orson Boles.
Plot
[edit | edit source]In a small Alabama town, John Robinson, a disliked general manager of the local paper, The Catherine Call, is found murdered in the news room with a spike through his head. Managing editor Kiel St. James takes it upon himself to solve the crime to help keep the newspaper going.[1]
Reviews
[edit | edit source]The New York Times said "besides being a traditional, cleverly plotted murder mystery, Goodbye Goliath is an accurate picture of how a small-town newspaper operates. Mr. Chaze, himself a former city editor for a Mississippi paper, knows the ins and outs of the news room. He tells his story with a good deal of sophistication, including some sexual humor that never becomes offensive."[1]
Reviewing Goodbye Goliath, along with two other novels by Chaze, Mr. Yesterday (1984) and Little David (1985), a reviewer for The New Yorker described them as "good, down-home fun with much flavorful redneck talk...plenty of excitement too."[2]
References
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