The Morning Show Murders
by Al Roker, Dick Lochte
Hardcover, 312 pages
Published November 24th 2009 by Delacorte Press (first published January 1st 2009)
Goodreads synopsis:
Nobody can dish morning TV like Al Roker, who's seen every side of a business that looks good on camera--even when sharks are circling inside the gleaming glass Manhattan media headquarters. Treachery abounds in Roker's riotously thrilling debut novel--at once an ingenious murder mystery and a delicious behind-the-scenes look at network TV. As fact and fiction collide and the backbiting ignites, The Morning Show Murders will make you wonder: How much of this stuff is real?
Network TV can be murder. Just ask Billy Blessing, famous for his smile, charm, and ability to survive the shark tank that is high-stakes morning TV. But though Billy has outlived his fair share of prima-donnas, his cooking segment on Wake Up America! is a staple of the American diet, and his Manhattan bistro is a mega-success, his career has just taken a very dangerous turn: His show's perky cohost, Gin McCauley, has launched into some brass-knuckles contract negotiations. A visiting Mossad agent is about to tell all on the air. And then the network's head honcho is murdered in his luxury apartment, and an ambitious D.A. decides that Billy is to blame.
Forensics show that Gerry Gallagher was poisoned and that the fatal coq au vin came from Billy's restaurant. Gerry had an impressive list of women in his black book--and a news assignment in Afghanistan had plunged the TV exec into the heart of a violent international secret. Now unsavory characters are coming out of the woodwork, and another murder strikes the show's inner circle. Billy knows that someone's trying to frame him. He also knows that a ruthless international assassin has just arrived in New York City. And suddenly, for the most trusted guy on TV the ultimate career move is not about ratings. It's about staying alive--and stopping the next murder from becoming tomorrow's breaking news.
***
2 stars
This is the first book in the Billy Blessing series by Al Roker and Dick Lochte.
I have to admit this book was not my cup of tea. I had a hard time getting into it since I started out wondering who the main character was since it wasn’t immediately apparent. We were inundated with so many minor characters that I couldn’t tell who the important ones were. When I finally got a handle on it, Billy ended up being a real snooze. I think Al was trying to make himself the main character. But if he had used his online persona, he might have had a lot more success.
I do not plan on reading anything else from this author.
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