A Crime Story

Published by M. Evans & Company
Distributed by Simon & Schuster

About The Book

The crime takes place late one night in the mansion of Illinois Governor-elect Maitland Ashmore. His only son, Day, is bludgeoned to death, gruesomely slaughtered in his own bed. This is a textbook murder—no witnesses, no apparent motives, not a single clue. Or so it seems. This is a crime only a sharp, calculating mind could have planned. And only a true student of crime can solve.
Jack Journey is that student. Author of a syndicated crime column, he is intimately familiar with all the famous crimes of the past. But when Governor Ashmore asks him to act as press liaison on the case, Journey is thrust into the middle of an all-too-real crime of the present. Soon it is clear that Journey must do more than simply record the facts of this case in his column. He must find the killer in order to protect his own life.
Intricately plotted and paced, A Crime Story takes us through a thrilling maze of twists and turns. Jay Robert Nash has created a world where there is danger in even the most innocent encounter, mystery behind every closed door. Rarely has an author lent such convincing authenticity to a novel of mystery and suspense.

About The Author

Product Details

  • Publisher: M. Evans & Company (May 6, 1981)
  • Length: 304 pages
  • ISBN13: 9781590775196

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Raves and Reviews

Crime buffs will enjoy trying to put the puzzle of this murder mystery together. Jay Robert Nash has written a sizzling crime thriller.

– Vincent Bugliosi, co-author of "Helter Skelter"

A real treat for those readers who like pace, gusto, terse dialogue, and fast action in their stories.

– Harry Mark Petrakis, author of "A Dream of Kings"

A unique blend of an '80s story steeped in the '30s, a literary alchemy which makes you wonder if Dashiell Hammett's natural heir isn't alive and well, chained to a smoking typewriter in Chicago.

– Thomas Gifford, author of "The Assassini" and "The Wind Factor"

Nash has drawn on a lifelong fascination with the outer edges of culture along with a sense of the street to create a quick-witted, cynical columnist turned detective.

– Mike Gray, author of "The China Syndrome"

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