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The Sanibel Sunset Detective Goes to the Movies (The Sanibel Sunset Detective Mysteries Book 14) Kindle Edition

4.8 4.8 out of 5 stars 19 ratings

The Sanibel Sunset Detective is back—and he’s in bigger trouble than ever!

The last thing Tree Callister wants is to get involved in the movie that is being shot on Sanibel Island. But the film deals with the Hollywood life of his best pal, Rex Baxter. Cast as Rex is the legendary movie star John Twist who was lured out of retirement to play the role.

Twist is a nasty, difficult drunk who needs a minder to make sure he stays sober. Tree, against his better judgment, gets dragged into the job. As filming begins, everyone involved soon comes to despise Twist. Tree has his hands full trying to keep the aging star in line.

It gets more complicated—not to mention dangerous—when a sketchy character named Shell Dean shows up accompanied by his shifty associate, Mr. Dix. Shell wants to hire Tree to find his fiancée who, he says, has been abducted by a certain famous actor currently shooting a movie in the area.

Two dead bodies show up, Rex’s movie is about to collapse—and a storm is brewing.
One wrong move and Tree goes to prison for the rest of his life. Or he ends up dead. As readers of the thirteen previous novels know only too well, he is adept at making all the wrong moves.

Tree finding himself nailed to a cross clad in a loincloth makes
The Sanibel Sunset Detective Goes to the Movies the craziest, most unlikely Tree Callister adventure yet!
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Product details

  • ASIN ‏ : ‎ B0C25RB1JQ
  • Publisher ‏ : ‎ West-End Books; 1st edition (April 10, 2023)
  • Publication date ‏ : ‎ April 10, 2023
  • Language ‏ : ‎ English
  • File size ‏ : ‎ 361 KB
  • Simultaneous device usage ‏ : ‎ Unlimited
  • Text-to-Speech ‏ : ‎ Enabled
  • Screen Reader ‏ : ‎ Supported
  • Enhanced typesetting ‏ : ‎ Enabled
  • X-Ray ‏ : ‎ Not Enabled
  • Word Wise ‏ : ‎ Enabled
  • Sticky notes ‏ : ‎ On Kindle Scribe
  • Print length ‏ : ‎ 216 pages
  • Customer Reviews:
    4.8 4.8 out of 5 stars 19 ratings

About the author

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Ron Base
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Ron Base was born in Belleville, Ontario. His bank manager father, Eric, moved the family--mother Jean and younger brother Ric--from Belleville to Cobourg to Picton, and finally to Brockville, Ontario. Here Base finished elementary school and then attended Brockville Collegiate Institute and Vocational School.

He began writing for a weekly newspaper, The United Counties Packet, when he was 15 years old. Based on his work for the weekly, he landed a part-time job at the daily Recorder and Times where he wrote a column for teenagers and worked as a general assignment reporter during the summer. He was also the Brockville correspondent for the Kingston Whig Standard.

He dropped out of high school at the age of 18 but was able to attend the journalism school at Algonquin College for one year in 1967-1968. While at the college, he wrote freelance pieces for the Ottawa Journal.

Base landed a fulltime job as general assignment reporter at the Oshawa Times in the summer of 1968. Three months later, he was hired at the Windsor Star where he wrote obituaries before being assigned to the night desk. Several months later, he was named the paper's media columnist.

After five years at the Windsor Star, Base was hired by publisher Douglas Creighton as a feature writer when the Toronto Sunday Sun began publication in 1973. He wrote pieces for the Sunday newspaper's magazine section and also did the weekly cover story for the paper's TV guide.

After three years at the Sun, he left to work briefly at the Toronto Star, returned to the Sun, just as briefly, before leaving to write magazine pieces. During this period, Base worked for a New York-based magazine syndicate, Writers Bloc, and produced profiles on everyone from actor Peter O'Toole and former New York governor Nelson Rockefeller to author Tom Wolfe, mystery writer Mickey Spillane, and Robert Blake before he was accused of killing anyone.

Those stories and others appeared in such publications as the Washington Post, New York Newsday, The New York Post, Chicago Tribune, The Miami Herald, and the Los Angeles Times. He also wrote several profiles for Cosmopolitan magazine and freelanced for Maclean's Magazine, first as its television critic and later as a contributing editor writing profiles.

Among the other publications Base wrote for during that period: TV Guide, Chatelaine, Quest Magazine, Canadian Business, and Toronto Life.

Returning to the Toronto Star in 1980, Base wrote TV criticism for a year and then replaced the newspaper's longtime movie critic Clyde Gilmour. From 1981 to 1987, Base wrote movie reviews as well as profiled the major stars of the day, including Clint Eastwood, Paul Newman, Meryl Streep, Goldie Hawn, Michael Caine, Eddie Murphy, Richard Burton, Dustin Hoffman, Warren Beatty, Diane Keaton, Woody Allen, Oprah Winfrey, Steven Spielberg, Tom Hanks, and Kevin Costner.

During this time, he hosted a syndicated radio show, Marquee Magazine at the Movies and also co-hosted The Movie Show with Alex Barris for TV Ontario. The series lasted for two seasons before being cancelled. He also appeared frequently on the CTV network's Canada AM to talk about movies.

"Heavenly Bodies", a script Base had co written while freelancing, was released by MGM in 1985, and sank at the box office. However, the movie about three young women who start their own workout club found renewed life in the burgeoning home video market, and, much to Base's continuing bemusement, refused to go away, becoming something of a cult hit, complete with an annual screening in Los Angeles.

During this time, Doubleday published Base's first novel, "Matinee Idol". Base left the Star in 1987 and co-produced and wrote a thriller, "White Light", directed by Al Waxman and starring Martin Kove. The film played theatrically in Canada. He also worked with David Haslam, publisher of Marquee Magazine, to produce a number of movie-oriented books, including "The Movies of the Eighties", "Marquee's Guide to the Movies on Video", and "Starring Roles", published in the United States as "If The Other Guy Isn't Jack Nicholson, I've Got The Part".

He lived in Paris for a time where he co-wrote "Jesuit Joe", based on a famous French graphic novel by Hugo Pratt. The movie was shot in Canada and released in France and Europe.

In 1992, Base moved to Los Angeles. He lived in Beverly Hills for the next five years and wrote "First Degree", a thriller that starred Rob Lowe and was produced by Richard O. Lowry. During that time, Base wrote a lot of low budget thrillers and edited Marquee Magazine.

He moved back to Toronto in 1997 to marry Katherine Lenhoff. The couple moved to Montreal in 2001. While there, Base co-wrote "The Last Sign", a $20 million Canada-France co-production that starred Andie McDowell.

A novel he started writing while in Los Angeles, "Magic Man", finally was published by St. Martin's Press, New York, in 2005.

Since then, he's concentrated on novels, writing "The Strange" in 2009, "The Sanibel Sunset Detective" in early 2011, followed by "The Sanibel Sunset Detective Returns" in late 2011. Since then, there has been a new novel each year.

The latest Tree Callister adventure is "The Devil and the Sanibel Sunset Detective."

Base and his wife currently live in the town of Milton, about 45 minutes west of Toronto, but he spends as much time on Sanibel Island as he can. He has two grown children, Joel and Erin, a stepson, Jonathan, and four grandchildren, whom he adores.

Customer reviews

4.8 out of 5 stars
4.8 out of 5
19 global ratings

Top reviews from the United States

Reviewed in the United States on May 29, 2023
What a joy to learn that Ron Base has released a brand new Sanibel Sunset Detective book! When I saw The Sanibel Sunset Detective Goes to the Movies on Amazon, I ordered it before my first cup of coffee! Loved reading about Tree, Rex, Freddie, and all the places on Sanibel, Fort Myers and southwest Florida that I am missing this spring, as the area works so hard to repair the damage of Hurricane Ian last September. Felt like being home again. And the twists and turns of this story were trickier than ever. I wasn’t sure who was the victim and who was the bad guy. But we know that Tree always figures it out in the end….
If you haven’t yet read one of the books in this series, you’ll want to read them ALL.
Thanks, Ron, for a great read, and please keep this series going because I can’t wait to see what happens to Tree and the gang next, as they work together to restore Sanibel to it’s former glory.
❤️ Peg in Iowa
Reviewed in the United States on May 5, 2023
Ron Base has written another great book in this series. Our hero Tree as usual saves the day while almost loosing his life.
I thought Tree's dreams were amusing, and thought provoking.
Ron's bringing in the past devastating hurricane in Lee County was great.
This book must have a follow up. The ending begs one.
Thank you Ron for another marvelously entertaining read.
Looking forward to the next installment.
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Reviewed in the United States on August 22, 2023
The Sanibel Sunset Detective is back – in this episode, Sanibel island’s only detective Tree Callister is thrown into a roiling storm of murder as the island is beset by suspicious Reno casino operators, vicious Hollywood movie has-beans, two dead bodies and a hurricane. It’s crazy, it’s fast, it’s loads of fun.

I’ve never been to Sanibel island, but after meeting Tree Callister and the cast of local characters, I dream of seeing it for real one day. If it’s anything like this wonderful series, it will be worth the trip.

In his series of murder mysteries somewhere between hard-boiled and cosy (and reminiscent of his great competitor Carl Hiaasen – but it’s hard to say who is better), Ron Base paints an irresistible picture, and more than anything, it’s about his cast of the weird and wonderful characters – 

Base is a master of the quirky, unpredictable character – characters with bizarre habits, unhealthy interests and irrational conflicts – characters you fall in love with.

Sanibel Island – every book is worth a visit!
Reviewed in the United States on August 19, 2023
I love the writing style of Ron Base and I enjoy this series. Tree Callister always wants to not be in the middle of things but he always seems to get there without trying. Too many bodies and too many secrets. This story was very fun to read. The author also has a poignant acknowledgement at the end of the book. Very touching.

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