"Private investigators Massachusetts Boston Fiction." . . "Detective and mystery stories"@en . "Detective and mystery stories" . "The Staked Goat"@en . "The staked goat"@en . "The staked goat" . . "The staked goat : a detective novel" . "Detective and mystery fiction" . . . . . "Kurbanlık koyun" . "Kurbanlık koyun"@tr . "Mystery fiction"@en . "Mystery fiction" . "Staked Goat"@en . . . . . . . . "A friend's murder takes Cuddy back to the dark days of Vietnam. As military policemen, John Francis Cuddy and Al Sachs bonded while patrolling the wild streets of American-occupied Saigon. Over a decade later, Cuddy is a private detective making a living in Boston's back alleys. Awoken by a ringing phone at seven a.m., Cuddy is shocked to hear Sachs asking to meet for a drink that night. His old friend's voice reminds him of the time a Cagney movie inspired Sachs to say that, if ever captured by enemy agents, he would break his pinkie finger to signal to Cuddy that his de."@en . . . . "Electronic books"@en . "Electronic books" . "Fiction"@en . "Fiction" . . . . . . . "A friend’s murder takes Cuddy back to the dark days of VietnamAs military policemen, John Francis Cuddy and Al Sachs bonded while patrolling the wild streets of American-occupied Saigon. Over a decade later, Cuddy is a private detective making a living in Boston’s back alleys. Awoken by a ringing phone at seven a.m., Cuddy is shocked to hear Sachs asking to meet for a drink that night. His old friend’s voice reminds him of the time a Cagney movie inspired Sachs to say that, if ever captured by enemy agents, he would break his pinkie finger to signal to Cuddy that his death was not an accident. Sachs never shows for the drink, and the next morning he is found naked in a park, his body mangled and his pinkie broken. To avenge his friend, Cuddy confronts a dark military cover-up, and travels back to the war zone he thought he left behind years ago." . . "Staked goat"@tr . . . . . "A friend's murder takes Cuddy back to the dark days of Vietnam. As military policemen, John Francis Cuddy and Al Sachs bonded while patrolling the wild streets of American-occupied Saigon. Over a decade later, Cuddy is a private detective making a living in Boston's back alleys. Awoken by a ringing phone at seven a.m., Cuddy is shocked to hear Sachs asking to meet for a drink that night. His old friend's voice reminds him of the time a Cagney movie inspired Sachs to say that, if ever captured by enemy agents, he would break his pinkie finger to signal to Cuddy that his death was not an accident. Sachs never shows for the drink, and the next morning he is found naked in a park, his body mangled and his pinkie broken. To avenge his friend, Cuddy confronts a dark military cover-up, and travels back to the war zone he thought he left behind years ago."@en . . "Boston (Mass.)" . . "FICTION / General" . . "Cuddy, John Francis (Fictitious character) Fiction." . . . . "FICTION / Mystery & Detective / General" . .