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Subject
- San Francisco Giants (Baseball team)--Fiction
- Daley, Mike (Fictitious character)--Fiction
- San Francisco (Calif.)--Fiction
- Divorced people--Fiction
- Fernandez, Rosie (Fictitious character)--Fiction
- Murder--Investigation--California--San Francisco--Fiction
- Public defenders--Fiction
- Sports agents--California--San Francisco--Fiction
Series
Availability
Availability Label | Location | Shelfmark | Availability | Reservations |
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Central Branch | Daisy Siege | Copies Available |
0 |
Comments and Reviews
Summary & Details
Full Record Details Table
Title Statement | Final out: a Mike Daley/Rosie Fernandez thriller / Sheldon Siegel. |
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Author | Siegel, Sheldon(Sheldon M.) |
Additional Contributors | Hertel, Shawn |
Publication | Washington, D.C.: National Library Service for the Blind and Print Disabled, Library of Congress, 2023(Talking Book Publishers, recording studio) |
Extent of Item | 1 DAISY audio disc (6 hours, 41 minutes) |
Performance Credits | Narrated by: Shawn Hertel. |
Audience & Ratings | Male narrator. Contains some strong language. |
Summary | "A ballpark. A bay. A body. Robbie Blum was San Francisco's most prominent sports agent. His clients included players on the Giants, Warriors, and Niners. It all came crashing down when his body was found floating in San Francisco Bay after a Giants game, his skull crushed. A Louisville Slugger floating next to his body. Though Blum was a wildly successful agent, his personal life was a disaster. Two failed marriages. Allegations of spousal abuse. Alcohol. Drugs. Gambling. Even his biggest client, Giants' slugger David Archer, had reservations about Blum's erratic behavior. Jaylen Jenkins is a native of Oakland ("before it was woke," as he likes to say). The graduate of McClymonds High School ekes out a living and pays for his mother's drug rehab by working at fast-food restaurants, driving for Uber, and selling Giants T-shirts outside the ballpark. Jaylen also ran errands for Blum-and it was more than getting his laundry. Jenkins picked up illegal drugs for Blum from a supplier at a strip club. Blum also provided Jaylen with Giants swag to sell behind the ballpark. On the night that he died, Blum met with Jaylen at his stand and gave money to Jaylen to deliver to Blum's drug supplier. Blum also had an autographed bat that he was going to give to his son. According to the police, Jaylen attacked Blum and killed him. Jaylen appears on a security video with a bat in hand. In the twelfth installment of New York Times bestselling author Sheldon Siegel's iconic San Francisco series, ex-spouses and Public Defenders Mike Daley and Rosie Fernandez defend Jaylen in a high-profile case where they race from the glamorous world of professional sports to the low-rent world of strip clubs and homeless encampments in a desperate search for an elusive truth where everybody has something to hide." -- Provided by publisher.Some strong language. |
Subjects & Genres | |
By Topic | Daley, Mike (Fictitious character)--Fiction |
Divorced people--Fiction | |
Fernandez, Rosie (Fictitious character)--Fiction | |
Murder--Fiction--Investigation--California--San Francisco | |
Public defenders--Fiction | |
Sports agents--Fiction--California--San Francisco | |
By Name | San Francisco Giants (Baseball team)--Fiction |
By Location | San Francisco (Calif.)--Fiction |
By Genre | Fiction |
Detective and mystery fiction | |
Legal fiction (Literature) | |
Talking books |