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^^ PDF Download Cold Crossover (Ernie Creekmore Book 1), by Tom Kelly

PDF Download Cold Crossover (Ernie Creekmore Book 1), by Tom Kelly

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Cold Crossover (Ernie Creekmore Book 1), by Tom Kelly

Cold Crossover (Ernie Creekmore Book 1), by Tom Kelly



Cold Crossover (Ernie Creekmore Book 1), by Tom Kelly

PDF Download Cold Crossover (Ernie Creekmore Book 1), by Tom Kelly

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Cold Crossover (Ernie Creekmore Book 1), by Tom Kelly

Linnbert "Cheese" Oliver, hard-luck high school basketball hero in the Northwest town of North Fork, is missing on a late-night ferry. And for real estate agent Ernie Creekmore, his father figure, friend and former coach, the news hits hard. Ernie's suffered too much loss and pain in his life — his wife, a state basketball championship, a mysterious medical malady — and he just can't accept the idea that Cheese might have taken his own life. Working with sheriff's detective Harvey Johnston, Ernie uses his contacts in real estate and hoops to trace Cheese's movements. Meanwhile, hints at possible foul play turn up in pieces of North Fork's rough-and-tumble history in fishing, logging and railroading, and the past and the present violently collide in a series of heart-stopping moments that peel back layers of greed, secrets and twisted family ties that refuse to stay buried.

  • Sales Rank: #771099 in eBooks
  • Published on: 2012-11-26
  • Released on: 2012-11-26
  • Format: Kindle eBook

Review
"Cold Crossover is a riveting mystery based on the drama of small-town high school basketball, complete with the missed shot no local will ever forget. Along the way, Tom Kelly takes the reader from the Northwest’s wild frontier days to its equally crazy present as a real-estate mecca. Kelly weaves the ferries, crabbers, and timber-men of his region into a timeless and page-turning tale."
—Jim Ragsdale, Minneapolis Star-Tribune

"A long-time coach goes on a search for the best player he ever had in a mystery that will keep you reading deep into the roots of its Pacific Northwest setting."
—Danny O’Neil, Seattle Times

"Award-winning real estate writer Tom Kelly makes a terrific transition into fiction, offering a small-town hero as the center of a big-time story. Kelly clearly knows his territory, including the energy and emotions surrounding a state high-school basketball tournament. A successful merging of past and present, Cold Crossover catches some colorful characters along the way to its captivating climax."
—Alan J. Heavens, Philadelphia Inquirer

About the Author
Cold Crossover is Tom Kelly’s first step into fiction and the first of the Ernie Creekmore series. The second book in the series, Hovering Above a Homicide, will be released in Spring, 2013.

Tom served The Seattle Times readers for 20 years, first as a sportswriter and later as real estate reporter, columnist and editor. His weekly features now appear in a variety of newspapers including the Miami Herald, Houston Chronicle, Portland Oregonian, Louisville Courier-Journal, Tacoma News Tribune and Spokane Spokesman-Review plus hundreds of websites.

His ground-breaking book How a Second Home Can Be Your Best Investment (McGraw-Hill, written with economist John Tuccillo) showed consumers and professionals how one additional piece of real estate could serve as an investment, recreation and retirement property over time.

His other books include Real Estate Boomers and Beyond: Exploring the Costs, Choices and Changes of Your Next Move (Dearborn-Kaplan); The New Reverse Mortgage Formula (John Wiley & Sons); Cashing In on a Second Home in Mexico (Crabman Publishing, written with Mitch Creekmore), Cashing In on a Second Home in Central America (Crabman Publishing, written with Mitch Creekmore and Jeff Hornberger), and Bargains Beyond the Border (Crabman Publishing).

Tom’s award-winning radio show “Real Estate Today” has aired for 19 years on KIRO, the CBS affiliate in Seattle. The program also has been syndicated in 40 domestic markets and to 450 stations in 160 foreign countries via Armed Forces Radio.

Tom and his wife, Jodi, Dean of the Humanities College at Seattle University, have four children and live on Bainbridge Island, WA.

Most helpful customer reviews

40 of 43 people found the following review helpful.
let down by laziness?
By Paul Haase
The new mystery "Cold Crossover" nicely presents the feel and flavor of a particular corner of the Pacific Northwest. Unfortunately for the reader the feel and flavor are of the 1980s, whereas the book is prominently set in 2005 (Each chapter begins with date and time). The mismatch between time and place so clang and clash throughout the book that the story fairly clunks along. In some places the mismatch only annoys, such as the "bulky word processors" newly installed on the desks of the Seattle "Tribune" newspaper, the everyday Datsun sedans, front wheel drive minivans as a subject of scorn, long and tangled telephone cords, Cher as the star of the hour, newfangled MRI technology. In other parts the mismatch frustrates the plotting. The prime example revolves around cell phones, or the lack thereof (heck, this story appears to pre-date fax machines. Also absent are iPods, internet, ATMs, DVDs, laptops, SUVs, coffeeshops, reality TV, among many). OK, it might make for a "character" to have the main man eschew a cell phone, but when almost the entire book focuses on the search for a missing 20-something washed-up basketball hero and no one--not even a national celebrity detective--thinks to locate or ping this guy's cell, it just doesn't work anymore. As the pages turn more and more people go missing, but never are cell records or locations sought. Instead there's lots of driving hither and thither to meet folks, seek clues, sample the local pastries (all this does the give the author, who clearly knows the area, nice opportunities to present yet more local flavor). Oh the semi-famous detective has a cell phone, as do some of the real estate colleagues of the main character (he's an English teacher-basketball coach-real estate salesman) but the phones are never in evidence, never of importance other than as a joke. A couple of other time-and-place frustrations include the still-viable local lumber business (pretty much wiped out in the area by environmental concerns in the 1980s and 90s) and the teen-years flashback of the main character (it reads like the 1950s but works out to the '70s if anyone bothers to do the math). OK, maybe all this mismatch bothers me overmuch because I grew up in the Northwest in the 1970s and '80s and returned in the 2000s; relatives still live smack in the middle of Skagit County where the mystery takes place. But the fact that the local flavor is done well--a comment of several reviewers--detracts all the more because the flavor doesn't ring true to the purported time. It's the flavor of 1980-something, not 2005. What I figure is that the author dug up a manuscript from his days at the Seattle Times in the 80s (what reporter doesn't have a novel or two lying about?) and slipped in a mention of cell phones here, an email there, and the Seahawks, Mariners, and Supersonics (once each) to repurpose it all as a mystery set in 2005. The author has a strong sense of place and knows his way around the page, so I can only attribute the mismatch of time and place and plot to laziness--he just didn't take the time to properly update his characters and setting. Simpler yet might have been to set the thing in 1985 or so. That way all the pay phones and VHS tapes, VW vans and station wagons, French films, and newly arrived Californians would've been right at home. One is left to wonder why. In the end it reduces the effort to a "nice" local story, a simple one-thing-happens-after-another piece, rather than a real whodunnit to puzzle out. To this reader unfortunately that's the real mystery here.

20 of 20 people found the following review helpful.
Overdone obsession
By Prairie House
The situation was interesting but the weaving of present day and historical events was confusing. This is a difficult thing to do and I found myself frequently going back to remember character and family names from the past. I am not a sports fan and found it difficult to believe that a single basketball game from five years earlier affected so many events in the present but perhaps that's just me.

12 of 12 people found the following review helpful.
Real Estate Maven's First Novel Is a Winner
By David Kinchen
When a town is as obsessed with winning the state basketball championship as is the fictional Washington state community of North Fork, the outcome can be tragic, as Tom Kelly graphically demonstrates in his debut mystery, "Cold Crossover".

"Cold Crossover" is the first of a series featuring Ernie Creekmore, is a mystery/thriller that combines the colorful history of Skagit County, north of Seattle and including several islands in Puget Sound, with present day real estate realities. Once the state's premier small community basketball coach, with 19 years on the job -- whose team almost won the 2000 state title -- five years after his star player missed a shot and lost the title, Creekmore is one of several agents selling vacation properties and year-round residences, mostly in the Lake Wilhelmina area of the county. (Don't look for these places on any map; they're fictional. I'm guessing North Fork is a stand-in for Mount Vernon, the real county seat of Skagit County).

Linnbert "Cheese" Oliver, hard-luck high school basketball hero, is missing on a late-night ferry. And for real estate agent Creekmore, his father figure, friend, and former coach, the news hits hard. Ernie's suffered too much loss and pain in his life--his wife, a state basketball championship, and to top it all off, a mysterious medical condition that may or may not be life threatening --and he just can't accept the idea that Cheese might have taken his own life.

Working with sheriff's detective Harvey Johnston, Ernie uses his contacts in real estate and hoops to trace Cheese's movements. Meanwhile, hints at possible foul play turn up in pieces of North Fork's rough-and-tumble history in fishing, logging, and railroading, and the past and the present violently collide in a series of moments that peel back layers of greed, secrets, and twisted family ties that refuse to stay buried.

Along the way, Creekmore starts to adjust to the death in childbirth of his beloved wife Cathy. As the book ends, we see a possible, even probable romantic interest for the old-school coach/real estate agent. How old school? The guy doesn't even have a cell phone, for goodness sakes! Can you imagine a real estate agent without at least one cell phone? And his choice of vehicles -- an old VW Bus and a 1963 International Travelall -- reflect his old school practicality. He inherited the truck from his fruit-growing dad in Yakima. For those not familiar with this latter vehicle, think Jeep Cherokee, the full-size version without the fake wood, or Chevrolet Suburban. Ernie Creekmore is an easy-to-like protagonist and "Cold Crossover" is a very well written debut novel.

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