Download Mouthpiece AudioBook Free
"Suppose your dad is one of New York City's top gangsters, and that you want nothing to do with him or his unlawful empire. Now visualize he's been murdered . . . and the one person who provides damn is you. Meet Mat Lawrence, a stand-up dude - think Gary Cooper - who's got one thing on his brain: revenge. The very last place Mat desires going is back to New York, but that is where the killers are, and he won't stop until they're inactive . . . or he is. And there's only 1 man who can help him keep track of them down: his father's unlawful legal professional - the Mouthpiece. But there's greater than a desire for revenge at play in this fatal game. When Mat's old man went down, a million us dollars went absent. Put everything along - a cold-blooded murder and a cool million ended up - and it's really a pretty good guess that the thing Mat is sure to find is some serious high temperature. Mouthpiece was at first posted in the September, 1934, model of Fascinating Detective. That same time, as the youngest copy writer ever to serve as leader of the New York Chapter of the American Fiction Guild, L. Ron Hubbard looked for to promote better precision in the writing of detective and mystery stories. To that end he asked the coroner to speak to the Guild associates over lunch break. He later recounted that "they might go away from the luncheon the weirdest cover from the sun of green." But, we can believe, they also gone away better up to date. Years later, broadening his studies in the region, Hubbard became a special officer with the LA Police Department. Also contains the tales of mystery, Flame City, the story of 1 man's harrowing attempt to save his dad and the city from a serial arsonist; Getting in touch with Squad Cars!, in which a police dispatcher would go to extraordinary lengths to lower a gang of bank robbers after he is accused of working with them; and Grease Spot, the story of your former racecar drivers, now who owns a wrecking company, who takes on fast and loose with the authorities . . . and could have to pay for it."