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No Sleep Till Wonderland

Audiobook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

Narcoleptic Southie PI Mark Genevich returns in this sequel to The Little Sleep from the Bram Stoker Award–winning author of Survivor Song and The Cabin at the End of the World.


Like most private eyes, Mark Genevich is something of a lone wolf. So group therapy isn't a great fit. But his landlord/mother is convinced it will help his narcolepsy—ignoring the fact that his disorder is a physical condition. Truth is, he has the time. It's been a year and a half since his last big case, or any case.

It's never a wise choice to go on a two-day bender with someone you meet in group therapy, but there's something about Gus that intrigues Genevich. And when his new drinking buddy asks him to protect a female friend who's being stalked, the PI finally has a case.

Unfortunately, he's about to sleepwalk right into a very real nightmare. Before long he's a suspect in an arson investigation and running afoul of everyone from the cops to a litigious lawyer and a bouncer with anger management issues. Genevich must keep his wits about him—always a challenge for a detective prone to unexpected blackouts and hallucinations—to solve the crime and live to show up at his next therapy session.

In Paul Tremblay's follow-up to The Little Sleep, unreliable narrator Mark Genevich once again leads readers on a surreal and suspenseful wild ride through the mean streets of South Boston and his own dreamlike reality.

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    • AudioFile Magazine
      Mark Genevich, an unsuccessful P.I., has suffered from narcolepsy for 10 years. He's desperate for friendship, and when Gus, whom he meets at a group therapy session, invites him out for a drink, he goes. Thus begins a quirky mystery that includes drugs, murder, and violence. Genevich tells the story, which consists mainly of his thoughts about what is going on, and Stephen Thorne does a nice job of getting into his character. Some of the other characters are fully drawn, others more mildly differentiated. Thorne handles the many humorous moments well, especially when Genevich has rational conversations during a narcoleptic attack, none of which he remembers upon awakening. S.S.R. (c) AudioFile 2010, Portland, Maine
    • Publisher's Weekly

      December 14, 2009
      While somewhat derivative of Hitchcock, Tremblay’s second novel featuring South Boston PI Mark Genevich improves enough on the first, The Little Sleep
      (2009), to suggest that the unusual hero—a narcoleptic sleuth subject to unpredictable blackouts—can sustain a series. Genevich is scraping the bottom of the barrel after one of his frequent screwups leads to his following the wrong woman on what should have been a straightforward investigation of marital infidelity, a goof that leads his client, an investment company CEO, to consider suing him. Genevich gets another opportunity from a fellow member of the group therapy sessions his mother forces him to attend, who asks him to protect a female bartender from a stalker. That assignment winds up placing Genevich on the police radar as an arson suspect. The plot twists satisfy more than surprise, but the clever writing will keep readers turning the pages.

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  • OverDrive Listen audiobook

Languages

  • English

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