Of course, Hunter can't ignore a challenge, so he sets out to discover who Domingo is, and why he needs to threaten the life of a low-rent private eye. Hunter also is never hesitant about providing his more attractive female clients with additional 'services'.Īs the novel opens, a six-foot-eight, 500 lb former wrestler and psychopath named Mountain bashes his way into Hunter's office and tosses the private eye against a wall, leaving with a threat: Stay Away from Domingo. Hunter takes the kind of cases that lead him into the down and dirty streets of the city, which is fine with Hunter, who is never too busy to run from a confrontation either with thugs, or crooked cops. 'Enchilada' is set in Los Angeles in the early 1980s and features rough-and-tough private eye Sam Hunter. A sequel, 'Sleaze', was published in 1985. 'The Big Enchilada' (224 pp) was published by Avon Books in February 1982. (the early 90s were still the glory days of the videocassette). In the early 1990s Morse also wrote a two-volume guide to low budget movies, Video Trash Treasures Vol. One of these novels, The Flesh Eaters, is out of print and difficult to find, but a very worthwhile read, according to a review at the Too Much Horror Fiction Blog. Morse wrote several crime and horror novels in the late 70s and early 80s.
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