Amos Walker

Amos Walker is a fictional character in a series of books by sometime western author Loren D. Estleman.[1] He is a private detective who lives on the Detroit-Hamtramck border and works in Detroit, Michigan.

As a Vietnam vet[2] who boxed in college and served as a military policeman, he is sharp and streetwise. But, like all good "eyes", he has an irreverent side. Amos was fired from the Detroit Police while still in Academy for punching someone out in the shower. In Motor City Blue, set around 1980, Amos is in his thirties and the character has aged in later novels.[3] Amos is a traditionalist. As one reviewer noted:

Like Estleman, who pecks out his books on a 1967 Olympia manual typewriter, Walker is wa-a-ay low-tech. At one point, the middle-aged P.I. turns on his cell phone and draws its antenna out with his teeth. (When was the last time you saw a cell phone with a retractable antenna?!)[3]

Bibliography

  1. Motor City Blue
  2. Angel Eyes
  3. The Midnight Man
  4. The Glass Highway
  5. Sugartown
  6. Every Brilliant Eye
  7. Lady Yesterday
  8. Down River
  9. Silent Thunder
  10. Sweet Women Lie (1990)
  11. Never Street
  12. The Witchfinder
  13. The Hours of the Virgin
  14. A Smile on the Face of the Tiger
  15. Sinister Heights
  16. Poison Blonde
  17. Retro (2004)
  18. Nicotine Kiss (2006)
  19. American Detective (2007)
  20. Left-handed Dollar (2010)
  21. Amos Walker: The Complete Story Collection (2010; short stories)
  22. Infernal Angels (2011)
  23. Burning Midnight (2012)
  24. Don't Look for Me (2014)
  25. You Know Who Killed Me (2014)
  26. The Sundown Speech (2015)
  27. The Lioness Is the Hunter (2017)
  28. Black and White Ball (2018)
  29. When Old Midnight Comes Along (2019)
gollark: Oh, pyrovars?
gollark: Pyros?
gollark: Now a golden wyvern.
gollark: If not... the world shall die.
gollark: An omniwall of multiple breeds?

References

  1. "SINISTER HEIGHTS: An Amos Walker Novel". Publishers Weekly. Retrieved December 18, 2017.
  2. "Amos Walker Novels". Macmillan. Retrieved December 18, 2017.
  3. Geiger, Mia (October 20, 2011). "Book Review: Infernal Angels". AARP. Retrieved December 18, 2017.
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