Narrated by Kathy James
Publisher: Southern Owl Publications, LLC
Publication Date: February 10, 2018
Audio Book Length: 6 hours, 38 minutesSCROLL DOWN FOR THE GIVEAWAY!

Covey Jencks is a murder mystery with a social conscience. Set in West Texas with a cast of colorful and humorous characters, it follows a young lawyer from Washington, DC back to his hometown of Odessa, Texas. He wants and needs to solve a murder case from 1979 in 1993. The problem is that the Odessa Police Department has already found its man, and no one wants to re-visit the case of a black prostitute whose life was seemingly of no consequence to anyone. But Freddie Mae Johnson’s death matters to Covey, and eventually he discovers an old flame, JayJay Qualls, who also knew and loved Freddie. Together they undertake an investigation that uncovers not only the truth about Freddie but also the secrets of Odessa’s south side, Mexican gangs, a Boston mobster, and the fallacy of unexamined assumptions. Finding out who killed Freddie is one thing, but preventing their own demise is quite another! 

Covey Jencks – My Audiobook Review
Covey Jencks was my second audiobook and I’m glad it was. It was highly enjoyable to listen to especially after about the mid-point of the story. Shelton Williams crafted a deep mystery surrounding an old murder that intertwined a fast-paced story around a various cast of characters. As the story goes Covey, who left Odessa to become a lawyer, had been haunted by someone’s murder when he was a boy. The driving force of his move back to his hometown was to find out who actually committed the murder.
For the narration perspective, the reading of the front book material caught me off guard, as well as the story being read by a woman given the lead character was a male. After listening to the first few chapters that became a moot point. Kathy James carried the story well even given some mispronunciations. I found the reading speed of 1.25x to be best to listen to this book.
My initial thought was how can a small book of fewer than 165 pages have seventy-four chapters? I’ve always been chided by having small chapters in my own writing. As the audiobook progressed the small chapters made sense and soon I realized that each chapter stood on its own and lead into the next chapter.
What I picked up on during this reading was the many aspects of historical authenticity Shelton used to tell this story. From how some Texas towns had areas known as “The Flats”, to Underwood’s Restaurant, to how cars used to be washed, to the lone Mode O’Day store – this story could indeed have been nonfiction. Even though Shelton made mention of using the language he did, that factual language is what carried the story with even more legitimacy. I also loved that the author incorporated one of my favorite movie characters, Keyser Söze from the movie “The Usual Suspects.” Towards the end of this story, the description reference became perfect for the character situation solving this murder.
Then there are the last few words of the book… making me wonder if indeed the story of Covey will continue!


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11/27/18
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Review
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11/27/18
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Excerpt
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11/28/18
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Audio Review
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11/29/18
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Guest Post
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11/29/18
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Playlist
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11/30/18
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Audio Review
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12/1/18
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Author Interview
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12/1/18
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Character Interview
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12/2/18
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Review
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12/2/18
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Scrapbook Page
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12/3/18
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Review
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12/4/18
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Audio Review
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12/5/18
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Excerpt
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12/6/18
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Audio Review
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12/6/18
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Review
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You’re so welcome, Kristine!
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Authentic is exactly the right word for this book. Thanks for an honest review!
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