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PDF Cite. The Lonely Silver Rain is in a sense the belated sequel to Pale Gray for Guilt (1968), although to explain how would spoil the novel's end. It also continues a long-term development of ...
From a beloved master of crime fiction, The Lonely Silver Rain is one of many classic novels featuring Travis McGee, the hard-boiled detective who lives on a houseboat. Travis McGee has luck to thank for his reputation as a first-rate salvager of stolen boats. Now Billy Ingraham, a self-made tycoon, is betting that McGee can locate his $700,000 ...
- John D. MacDonald
12. März 1985 · The Lonely Silver Rain. Hardcover – March 12, 1985. Someone is trying to kill Travis McGee, someone linked to southern Florida's drug traffickers--either Miami's old-time underworld or the new generation of Latino drug barons--and in order to save his own life, McGee must detonate a drug war.
- Hardcover
- John D. MacDonald
From a beloved master of crime fiction, The Lonely Silver Rain is one of many classic novels featuring Travis McGee, the hard-boiled detective who lives on a houseboat. Travis McGee has luck to thank for his reputation as a first-rate salvager of stolen boats. Now Billy Ingraham, a self-made tycoon ...
From a beloved master of crime fiction, The Lonely Silver Rain is one of many classic novels featuring Travis McGee, the hard-boiled detective who lives on a houseboat. Travis McGee has luck to thank for his reputation as a first-rate salvager of stolen boats. Now Billy Ingraham, a self-made tycoon, is betting that McGee can locate his $700,000 ...
- John D. MacDonald
1. Jan. 1984 · The Lonely Silver Rain is the 21st and, as it turns out, the last in the McGee series (MacDonald died shortly after this one was published). I have read several of the books now, although not in sequence, as they are increasingly hard to find on library bookshelves. McGee is an interesting character--he is thoughtful, contemplative, self-deprecating, intelligent without being overly ...
28. Apr. 1985 · The Lonely Silver Rain. by John D. MacDonald (Knopf: $15.95; 208 pp.) The suspicion abounds that the real fans of novelist John D. MacDonald would buy and read everything the man writes, even if ...