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It's All Brett's Fault

By: David D. D'Aguanno
Narrated by: Travis Henry Carter
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Summary

Marcus Wade was a man who wasn't easily intimidated - that is, until he had reason to believe someone was trying to kill him.

Upon talking the matter over with his wife Sybil, he decided to hire someone who would not only protect him, but who would also scare off any potential murderers. In other words, he needed a man who was tough, dangerous - and more than a little unscrupulous.

Enter private detective Brett Cornell, who jumps at the chance to push his weight around on the man's behalf, but is even more anxious to get it on with the lovely Sybil Wade, as well as her younger and even more voluptuous sister Nora - for starters!

The fun and games come to an abrupt end, however, when someone really ends up dead, and everyone involved agrees: It's all Brett's fault!

©2012 David D. D'Aguanno (P)2018 David D. D'Aguanno
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  • Overall
    5 out of 5 stars
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super funny listen

Never have I met a character quite like Brett Cornell, he's arrogant, loud, chauvinistic and in his own words an unscrupulous bastard. Just about every person he meets me manages to piss off in one way or another.

I laughed at all the shenanigans Brett manages to get himself into during this story, from punching Marcus Wade for looking at him wrong while he was working out at a local gym, to calling Nora everything under the sun. This entire character base worked perfectly together in my eyes.

Loved the book and I would highly recommend it to everyone.

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  • Overall
    5 out of 5 stars
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More than one way to skin a canary.

It's hot outside and Brett is pumping iron. Modest and retiring as always, at 37 he believes he's never looked better, even hotter than the weather. But he's still a long way from his goal of Easy Street by the time he's 40. In fact, he's broke. And still hurting after 'she who cannot be named.'
So when offered a job as protection for a man who claims that someone wants to murder him which pays five thousand dollars for a couple of weeks work, Brett goes along with the pushy Marcus Wade, little knowing that he might just have met another unscrupulous bastard like himself.

The story is, as always, ramblingly related by Brett (and his alter ego, Trains Henry Carter) himself. Not a book for the uptight P.C. crowd. In fact, Brett is not someone yho anyone would ever want to really meet, but experienced th byrough the pages of David D.D'Aguanno's books, he is rampant, if you get my drift. And Travis Carter's narration is superb, becoming the vain, obnoxious moustachioed and muscled monster so seductive to the ladies, whilst at the same time voicing everyone else be they male or female, very distinctively. The combination of author and narrator makes the Brett Cornell stories absolutely unmissable.
Do I recommend it? "Do ducks quack and mooses moo?" Absolutely!

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