Mary J. (mpmarus) reviewed The Bishop and the Missing L Train (Blackie Ryan) on + 133 more book reviews
I'm a Greeley fan, but I'm really a Blackie Ryan fan - and this book is a good example of why!
Dana S. (browneyedgirl) reviewed The Bishop and the Missing L Train (Blackie Ryan) on + 135 more book reviews
I enjoyed this Bishop Blackie Ryan mystery. Superobnoxious bishop has been sent to Chicago and disappears, along with the train car he was in. When Bishop Blackie finds him, he is full of heroin, so out of everybody's way, but who did it?
Jeanie S. (JeanieS) reviewed The Bishop and the Missing L Train (Blackie Ryan) on + 192 more book reviews
Another great Bishop Blackie story
How can Bishop Blackie educate and entertain again?
Another Blackie Ryan. Good sense of place,time and fun.
I love this guy!
I love this guy!
Denell W. (Chitimacha-Princess) reviewed The Bishop and the Missing L Train (Blackie Ryan) on + 586 more book reviews
Millions of Blackie Ryan fans will be thrilled with his return in this exciting novel of mystery and suspense. The Vatican has just assigned auxiliary Bishop Gus Quill to the Archdiocese of Chicago over the violent protests of Blackie's boss Sean Cardinal Cronin. Archbishop of Chicago, and the not-so-silent protests of Bishop Blackie. Bishop Quill is under the illusion, one might say delusion, that he has been sent from Rome to relace the good Cardinal, when in fact ome was dying to get rid of him because of his incompetence. Immediatley upon arriving in Chicago, he manages to disappear while riding the L Train and it is up to Blackie to find him. As the Cardinal says, "The Vatician does not like to lose bishops, even auxiliaries."
And thus begins the search for the missing bishop no one really wants to find. Blackie faces these problems squarely and with the kind of deductive mind reminiscent of G.K. Chesterton's Father Brown, manages to find soloutions to some of the most baffling mysteries he has ever encountered.
And thus begins the search for the missing bishop no one really wants to find. Blackie faces these problems squarely and with the kind of deductive mind reminiscent of G.K. Chesterton's Father Brown, manages to find soloutions to some of the most baffling mysteries he has ever encountered.