Not, Not Guilty: A Cliff Ford Mystery (The Cliff Hangers Mystery Series Book 5)

Not, Not Guilty: A Cliff Ford Mystery (The Cliff Hangers Mystery Series Book 5)

Posted entirely because of that comma. (And the Amazon description shows a similar command of the English language.)

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Zsuzsa
Zsuzsa
1 year ago

Mr. Ford there looks like he’s on some serious drugs.

Zak Freeman
1 year ago

Double negative means someone really is guilty.

red
red
1 year ago

The Cliff hanger’s adjective is possessive.

Hitch
1 year ago
Reply to  red

But, but but…what if, god forbid, it’s a character’s name? CLIFF HANGARS, private eye….

red
red
1 year ago
Reply to  Hitch

Possessive would then be the CLIFF HANGARS hanger’s adjective.

Hitch
1 year ago
Reply to  red

Yes, it would be Cliff Hangars’ adventure! (I’ve misspelt Hangar, for this, but I’m sticking with it. just ask the CMOS–consistency is best…)

red
red
1 year ago
Reply to  Hitch

But…the cover clearly says it’s a “Cliff Ford Mystery,” although Cliff’s picture does not look like he is really a big red dog.

Maybe it is an adventure featuring “Cliff’s Hangers.” Kind of like Charlie’s Angels.

Hitch
1 year ago
Reply to  red

Christ, that’s even worse. I somehow didn’t notice that. The “Cliff Ford Mysteries” have…say it ain’t so…cliff hangers? REALLY?

KILL ME NOW. Just do it.

red
red
1 year ago
Reply to  Hitch

According to the cover, Cliff has them, but the mystery doesn’t.

Hitch
1 year ago
Reply to  red

Wait, shouldn’t that–at this point–be Cliff Fjord?

Hitch
1 year ago
Reply to  Nathan

Maybe it was originally Sci-Fi and it was Cliff Oort?