
The Cutting Room
Author: Laurence Klavan
Narrator: Nick Sullivan
Unabridged: 8 hr 6 min
Format: Digital Audiobook Download
Publisher: Blackstone Publishing
Published: 10/01/2010
Categories: Fiction, Mystery & Detective, Suspense & Thriller, Crime

Author: Laurence Klavan
Narrator: Nick Sullivan
Unabridged: 8 hr 6 min
Format: Digital Audiobook Download
Publisher: Blackstone Publishing
Published: 10/01/2010
Categories: Fiction, Mystery & Detective, Suspense & Thriller, Crime
Laurence Klavan is the Edgar Award–winning author of Mrs. White. His other novels include The Cutting Room and The Shooting Script. He received two Drama Desk nominations for the book and lyrics to Bed and Sofa, a musical produced by New York’s Vineyard Theatre. With Susan Kim he cowrote the graphic novels City of Spies and Brain Camp. As kids, he and his three brothers used to make epic movies in their backyard, reenacting the Alamo, the signing of the Magna Carta, and the end of the world.
Nick Sullivan has narrated audiobooks for over twenty years and has recorded over four hundred titles. An Audie Award winner, he is also the recipient of numerous AudioFile Earphones Awards. His TV and film credits include The Good Wife, The Affair, Bull, Boardwalk Empire, 30 Rock, Our Idiot Brother, and Private Life.
The bits of movie trivia and the relationship of the two main characters were the only really interesting parts of this book for me.The story line got pretty far off line at times,I thought. There were some pretty weak moments also. If you're going to go through the trouble of killing someone for so......more
It was... fine. The plot was really far-fetched. Like, ridiculous. Especially just the sheer number of times this movie was stolen and killed for and mistaken for other things. For such an outrageous plot, though, the narration was good, and I appreciated Roy's character growth, how he realizes that......more
“A lightning-paced, high-concept thriller…Astonishingly inventive, The Cutting Room stands out as one of the best mysteries of the year!” Tess Gerritsen, New York Times bestselling author
“Like every other character in this witty spoof, Roy Milano, a New York film buff who airs his arcane knowledge via a self-published newsletter called Trivial Man, is a beloved movie cliché. Cast as the Hitchcockian hero who embarks on a quest for knowledge and becomes a pawn in a deadly game of intrigue, Roy plays his role with disarming guilelessness…Although the plot eventually implodes from its pileup of improbabilities, the farcical spirit of the adventure makes it worth its weight in popcorn.” New York Times
“[A] wry, whimsically romantic crime novel. Brimming with engaging tidbits of movie trivia, it is narrated in the self-effacing voice of its bumbling, endearing hero, Roy Milano, publisher of Trivial Man, a cultish movie trivia newsletter sold through bookstores and video outlets around the Big Apple…This tongue-in-cheek whodunit marks the long overdue second coming of a gifted novelist.” Publishers Weekly (starred review)
“Filled with intrigue, red herrings, chases, and hairpin turns, this entry into the Hollywood detective arena is clearly intended to introduce a series. Though the plot line is a bit thin for die-hard mystery readers, the story is peppered with enough movie trivia and snappy dialog to capture the attention of movie buffs and leave them eager for a sequel.” Library Journal
“Milano is an engaging character, from his self-deprecating self-assessment to his compulsive habit of remembering film trivia when he gets nervous. And Klavan’s touch is playful and deft, which is good because his target, Hollywood, is an oft-pricked one. But if skewering the rich and shallow is easy sport, many readers will nonetheless agree with the hero that movies often need to be saved from those who make them. A great bit of escapism for film and mystery buffs alike.” Booklist
“Librettist Klavan’s first novel under his own name stars a trivia buff in a madcap search for the Holy Grail of missing movies… [Loaded]with nuggets of irrelevant movie trivia readers may well find fascinating—or grating.” Kirkus Reviews
“Besides having a superb acting voice, Nick Sullivan knows how to make a reading fun. In Klavan’s latest, Sullivan gives a tongue-in-cheek rendition of a hapless detective’s search for the long-lost full-length version of an Orson Welles film while bodies pile up around him. Sullivan is not only called upon to portray the detective, who is also a movie aficionado, but also a host of unusual characters. You just can’t help chuckling as Sullivan works. There’s a plump reporter, caricatures of a couple of sexy women, a street guy, and a chap who’s into bodybuilding films. All are augmented by Sullivan’s light, sure touch.” AudioFile