· Friday’s Forgotten Book: Outwitting Trolls by William G. Tapply. by Aubrey | Jul 8, This week’s forgotten book is really about a series that is too good to fade into oblivion. Before Victoria Houston wrote about fly-fishing in fictional Loon Lake, Wisconsin, and Keith McCafferty gave us Sean Stranahan, a fly fisherman and private investigator in Montana, William G. Tapply () . Outwitting Trolls (Brady Coyne: Thorndike Press Large Print Mystery) Hardcover – Large Print, February 2, by. William G. Tapply (Author) › Visit Amazon's William G. Tapply Page. Find all the books, read about the author, and more. See search results for this author. William G. Tapply (Author) out of 5 stars/5(44). Outwitting Trolls ebook mid; Brady Coyne Series, Book 25 · Brady Coyne By William G. Tapply. Read a Sample. Sign up to save your library. With an OverDrive account, you can save your favorite libraries for at-a-glance information about availability. William G. Tapply. Publisher. St. Martin's Publishing Group. Release. 09 November
This is the twenty-sixth and last of the books in William G. Tapply's long-running series featuring Boston attorney Brady Coyne, published in , a year after Tapply's death. The series began in with Death at Charity's Point, and Coyne also appeared in two other novels that Tapply wrote with Philip R. Craig. Brady Coyne is a Boston attorney who focuses on a few private clients and the legal drudgery of their everyday life, which leads to a generally unexciting life. Brady, however, gets a call from an old friend and former neighbor, a man from his past. When Brady was married and living in suburbia, Ken Nichols was his happily married neighbor. Both marriages fell apart years ago and Brady moved. Buy a cheap copy of Outwitting Trolls book by William G. Tapply. Boston attorney Brady Coyne gets a call from an old friend, Ken Nichols, to join him for a drink. The next day Brady gets a call from Ken's ex-wife. She's standing Free shipping over $
Brady Coyne is a Boston attorney who focuses on a few private clients and the legal drudgery of their everyday life, which leads to a generally unexciting life. Brady, however, gets a call from an old friend and former neighbor—a man from his pas. William G. Tapply was a contributing editor to FieldStream and the author of numerous books on fishing and wildlife, as well as more than twenty books of crime fiction, including Third Strike, Hell Bent and Dark Tiger. He lived with his wife in Hancock, New Hampshire. Reading William G. Tapply’s 25th Brady Coyne novel, “Outwitting Trolls,” the last one written before his death last year, provides a potent reminder of how much the tall, gentle guy with a passion for the outdoors, fishing, dogs, and for the women in his life will be missed.
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