Download The Corpse as Big as the Ritz: Esquire, August 1973 AudioBook Free
Sergeant Forrest Hinderliter of the Gila Bend (Az) Police have been up since two in the morning with a lifeless body and a shaky report. He'd found the body - a dark-colored man with a bullet gap in his back again - lying on to the floor in apartment 44 of the North Euclid Avenue project at the traditional western border of town. He'd also found a woman there, which was her report: She woke up after midnight to find a man on top of her, making love to her. She'd never seen the person before. She advised him to get off and get away; she warned him she was planning on another man. A car pulled up outside and flashed its lights. A minute later the other man came up through the door. Explanations were insufficient. In the scuffle a weapon was drawn, a .38 revolver. A go gone off, the first visitor perished. In "The Corpse as Big as the Ritz", Ron Rosenbaum, author of Explaining Hitler and get better at of the "investigation of investigations", offers us a Hollywood noir with colours of F. Scott Fitzgerald and Raymond Chandler: An inquiry in to the "Dirty Little Death in the Desert" of David Whiting, the love-stricken business manager of actress Sarah Miles, who was simply found lifeless in the actress's hotel room through the filming of the Burt Reynold's Western The Man Who Loved Pet cat Dance. "The Corpse as Big as the Ritz" was actually shared in Esquire, August 1973.