The Jacq of Spades: Part 1 of the Red Dog Conspiracy
Written by Patricia Loofbourrow
Narrated by Machelle Williams
3.5/5
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About this audiobook
From NY Times and USA Today bestselling author Patricia Loofbourrow ...
"... a story that is almost irresistible." SciFi and Scary
Kidnapping. Murder. Betrayal.
1899 years after the Catastrophe, the steam-powered domed city of Bridges is controlled by the Mob.
For the past ten years, Jacqueline Spadros has spent her days in a gilded cage, her nights haunted by her best friend Air's murder. Air tried to stop her sale to the Spadros crime family, and he died for it.
In a city that hates her just because of where she was born, Jacqui has secretly become a private detective to earn enough money of her own to escape. But when Air's little brother goes missing, she has to decide: live with the nightmares and guilt, or defy her husband's sadistic father to save the boy?
Dark, gritty, multi-layered Victorian-inspired detective neo-noir that keeps the reader guessing to the very end.
Lovers of Downton Abbey, Game of Thrones, Phillip Marlowe, The Expanse, Seanan McGuire, or the Sherlock Holmes mysteries will enjoy this debut novel of the Red Dog Conspiracy series.
The Jacq of Spades was part of the first edition of the Dark Humanity science fiction and fantasy box set, which made #8 on the USA Today bestseller list for February 5, 2017, and #5 on the NY Times bestseller list for February 12, 2017.
Over 20,000 copies of The Jacq of Spades have been sold!
This is part 1 of a 13-part serial audio novel:
- The Jacq of Spades <-- you are here
- The Queen of Diamonds
- The Ace of Clubs
- The King of Hearts
- The Ten of Spades (coming soon!)
Scroll up, click the button to buy, and begin the adventure!
Welcome to the Family.
Patricia Loofbourrow
Patricia Loofbourrow, MD is an SFF and non-fiction writer, PC gamer, ornamental food gardener, fiber artist, and wildcrafter who loves power tools, dancing, genetics and anything to do with outer space. She was born in southern California and has lived in Chicago and Tokyo. She currently lives in Oklahoma with her husband and three grown children.
More audiobooks from Patricia Loofbourrow
The King of Hearts Rating: 0 out of 5 stars0 ratings
Related to The Jacq of Spades
Titles in the series (5)
The Jacq of Spades: Part 1 of the Red Dog Conspiracy Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5The Queen of Diamonds: Part 2 of the Red Dog Conspiracy Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5The Ace of Clubs: Part 3 of the Red Dog Conspiracy Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5The King of Hearts: Part 4 of the Red Dog Conspiracy Rating: 0 out of 5 stars0 ratingsRed Dog Conspiracy Act 1: A Noir Future Steampunk Crime Family Saga Rating: 0 out of 5 stars0 ratings
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Reviews for The Jacq of Spades
14 ratings5 reviews
- Rating: 3 out of 5 stars3/5Really cool concept in a well-built world, but there was just a little too much.
- Rating: 3 out of 5 stars3/5There’s a lot going on in this book, maybe too much. Jacqueline (Jacqui) Spadros is married to Tony Spadros, the son of one of the ruling families of Bridges. She herself comes from the poor, the ‘Pot’. Jacqui has some sort of private detective business going on on the side, very secret. Then there’s a dangerous illegal drug, Party Time, going around. Plus there’s a missing boy. Then there’s the whole setting.Basically, I was intrigued by it all but had little time to figure one thing out before something else was thrown at me. The setting kept throwing me for a loop. It feels little historical, a little steampunky, a little dystopian. I like all those things but never got a firm grasp on what the domed city of Bridges was all about.Plenty of the characters held my interest. Of course, Jacqui is front and center. Now the tale does jump back and forth a bit, telling me in small snippets about Jacqui’s past. However, this confused me sometimes as to what was going on in the present. Jacqui has had all this training from Tony’s dad before she and Tony were married – everything from dressing like a lady to hand guns. She and Tony have been married for 3 years and it’s sometimes been good and sometimes not. I would have liked this story more if we had seen Jacqui in action more instead of simply being told what she can do.There’s Jacqui’s contacts and friends and family that are still in the Pot that add flavor to the tale. Her husband Tony isn’t as limited as he first appears to be. Tony’s dad is a right jerk and I look forward to seeing his demise (I hope) later in the series. Though I still feel like I missed something when it came to him lashing out at Jacqui’s maids.Jacqui’s secret private eye stuff felt over the top. We already have a lot going on in the story and then we toss this in. Jacqui references previous cases she’s solved but I kept wondering how she managed to do that plus keep it secret plus all the training she does for Family Spadros plus just being a lady, etc. I hope this side of her character gets filled out as the series goes forward.So all together, I wanted more from the story by trimming things down. I did enjoy it and I look forward to seeing where the series goes from here. 3.5/5 stars.The Narration: Machelle Williams was OK as the narrator. Her pacing is a bit slow. She does have a good voice for Jacqui. Her female voices were good but her male character voices were sometimes OK and sometimes they sounded like women. There were plenty of emotions in this story and sometimes Williams portrayed them well and sometimes her narration was a little stiff and dead. 3.5/5 stars.I received this audiobook as part of my participation in a blog tour with Audiobookworm Promotions. The tour is being sponsored by Patricia Loofbourrow. The gifting of this audiobook did not affect my opinion of it.
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5Jacqueline Spadros lives in Bridges and is married into a wealthy crime family. She runs a private investigator business on the side. When she was younger, her friend Air died and she is still haunted by this. When his little brother goes missing, she sets out to find him. I enjoyed this book. It was a good mystery and I loved the use of playing cards in the names. Jacqueline was a good character, she lives in a world where women are supposed to do as they are told, but she still tries to have her own life and help people through her business. I would recommend this book.
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5I love Victorian detectives like Sherlock Holmes! Jacqui is no Sherlock Holmes, but she is a delight, and the world that the author has created is as much a character as Jacqui. I love the creative quirks, like the fact that the four ruling families of Bridges are The Spadros, The Diamonds, The Clubbs, and the Harts. The way that each family has a unique look running about them. It is subtle and takes a moment to realize what the author is doing.
Following Jacqui through the present case, which pulls on much of her past, and sets up greater events to come, is a breath-taking chase through the brilliantly blended world that the author created. I have to be honest, I don't think I have actually read steampunk before, but I have watched Steampunk anime, and have wanted to read steampunk books. The author ticks several boxes of what I understand to be steampunk, but it is not super technical (what left me afraid of reading steampunk for so long!) I am eager to read the next books in The Red Dog Conspiracy!
The world feels very much like the dark underbelly of Victorian fashion and style, with a gritty mafioso vibe. - Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5Bridge is an isolated domed city divided into four quadrants each of which is controlled by a crime family who manufactures and distributes a drug known as “Party Time”. Each of the four quadrants contains affluent areas, areas known as the “pot” which are areas of the city that were destroyed during previous warfare between factions, and the slums where the very poorest people live. The crime families establish the economic systems for their quadrants and large portion of the population are starving. Large scale poverty and continual competition and mistrust among the families make Bridge a proverbial powder keg for violence.One quadrant is ruled by the Spadros family. Jacqueline Spadros is the twenty-two bride of Spadros heir-apparent Tony Spadros. Jacqui was raised in the Spadros Pot in a brothel and she has a multitude of reasons to mistrust and detest Spadros patriarch Roy Spadros. She knows if anything happened to her husband, Tony, Roy would not allow her to continue as part of the family. Because of this, she has taken on a secret business of her own; that of private detective.When Jacqui is contacted by a woman whose son, David, has disappeared she is surprised to learn that she knew the woman many years earlier and that the death of her older son plays a key role in Jacqui’s nightmares. Although the woman does not recognize Jacqui at first, Jacqui cannot resist trying to find David for his mother, partly to ease her own guilt left over from the death of the older boy.What transpires is a mystery story of the first order in the best tradition of Sherlock Holmes. Jacqui is a young woman in a precarious position who must uphold a social image, deal with her husband’s and the family patriarch’s expectations, deal with inter-familial politics, run a household, find David and stay alive in her spare time. How she manages this is remarkable and makes a first-rate mystery story.All of the characters are believable and the reader is left satisfied up until the end. Unfortunately, this book is a serial series; the reader must throw in another nickel for the next installment to achieve any satisfaction as far as finding out who did it. I am not a fan of serial series and strike the names of authors who use that method off my reading list. This story, however, is well written and well edited. I noticed no textual errors to distract me from the story. The Jacq of Spades is an all-around excellent mystery story that should appeal to any lover of mysteries, crime action, or to fans of stories about life in dystopian cultures. The end is a letdown for those, like me, who think readers deserve to know who did it in the end. That of course is the nature of the serial series and that, alone, will cost it a star.