"When Fletch finds a wallet
with $25,000 in cash inside, he doesn’t realize it’s the last piece of good
luck he’s going to see for a while. Because when he calls in to the News-Tribune,
he discovers a story he’s written is causing quite a sensation, and not the
good kind. He might just be out of a job permanently. If Tom Bradley, the chairman of Wagnall-Phipps and one of Fletch’s principal
sources, and not incidentally, the source of his paper’s embarrassment, is
dead, who’s been signing his name to company documents, and why doesn’t the
company treasurer seem to know? If he’s alive, how come his widow, Enid, has
Tom’s ashes on the mantel? Fletch may have more questions than answers on his
hands, but he knows he’s a pretty good reporter, and if he’s going to get his
reputation back, not to mention his job, he’s going to have to get to the
bottom of more than one mystery."
While Fletch and the Widow Bradley is Gregory
McDonald’s fourth book in the series, it’s actually the third book in its chronological
order. Here Fletch is around 24, young, divorced (wife Linda, whom does not jam
with wife Barbara from books 8 & 9, which are set before the original 1974
novel) and one assumes the author knows you'll
be clever enough to figure this out. It is a fun book, in many ways, and
while I did not pick-up a few signs of where this book was headed (as certain
reviews pointed out), I think it’s a pretty brilliant twist for a book released
in 1981 (it, strangely, very prescient to what is happening in the world today).
The entire book is full of twists and turns, and that great Fletch wit and
dialog. I’ve read McDonald grew more conservative as he aged, but I find
that surprising here as this book is so progressive. And again, it was written
in 1981!
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