When a rock ’n’ roll disc jockey is murdered at a live event, a reporter is out to find the killer in this mystery from the author of A Room to Die In .
From 3:00 to 4:00 every afternoon, Tutter “Tut” King reigns supreme. The dreamy disc jockey is a favorite of the sock-hop set, spinning all the records that are too rocking for their parents to let them buy. When Tut is implicated in a payola scheme—taking as much as $100,000 under-the-table to push third-rate records—his teenage fans stand behind him. For Tut’s last radio appearance, the teenyboppers turn out in force. He promises them a shocking announcement at the end of his set. Instead, they get a murder.
During intermission, some unfriendly listener buries an icepick in the record spinner’s chest. Reporter Jim Layton believes that Tut was about to implicate his bosses in the corruption. Now it’s up to Layton to determine who put radio’s coolest DJ on ice.
Review
''Ellery Queen is the American detective story.'' --Anthony Boucher, author of Nine Times Nine --This text refers to the mp3_cd edition.
About the Author
Ellery Queen is the pseudonymous author of dozens of mystery novels. These books, the first of which were written exclusively by Frederic Dannay and Manfred Bennington Lee, have gone on to become classics of American crime fiction.
Description:
When a rock ’n’ roll disc jockey is murdered at a live event, a reporter is out to find the killer in this mystery from the author of A Room to Die In .
From 3:00 to 4:00 every afternoon, Tutter “Tut” King reigns supreme. The dreamy disc jockey is a favorite of the sock-hop set, spinning all the records that are too rocking for their parents to let them buy. When Tut is implicated in a payola scheme—taking as much as $100,000 under-the-table to push third-rate records—his teenage fans stand behind him. For Tut’s last radio appearance, the teenyboppers turn out in force. He promises them a shocking announcement at the end of his set. Instead, they get a murder.
During intermission, some unfriendly listener buries an icepick in the record spinner’s chest. Reporter Jim Layton believes that Tut was about to implicate his bosses in the corruption. Now it’s up to Layton to determine who put radio’s coolest DJ on ice.
Review
''Ellery Queen is the American detective story.'' --Anthony Boucher, author of Nine Times Nine --This text refers to the mp3_cd edition.
About the Author
Ellery Queen is the pseudonymous author of dozens of mystery novels. These books, the first of which were written exclusively by Frederic Dannay and Manfred Bennington Lee, have gone on to become classics of American crime fiction.
--This text refers to the mp3_cd edition.