His new novel is Man in the Water: A McKenzie Novel.
Housewright applied the Page 69 Test to Man in the Water and reported the following::
It turns out that the Page 69 Test works very well in giving the reader an understanding of what my new book is about.Learn more about the book and author at David Housewright's website and Facebook page.
That’s because this is exact part of the book where the protagonist, an unlicensed private investigator named McKenzie, agrees to help Nevaeh, the daughter of Man in the Water – it comes at the end of Chapter Four.
It begins with a warning: “Something else, and this is important – you might not like what I discover. You might learn things you’ll wish you didn’t know. Have you thought of that?”
The page also suggests that Nevaeh’s stepmother and her lawyer might be involved in the death of her father.“I need you to call the Ramsey County Medical Examiner’s Office. I don’t have the number, but you can probably find it on their website. I want you to call and ask them to send you a complete copy of your father’s autopsy report. I can’t do it myself because I’m not a family member.”And it offers a brief insight into the character of McKenzie.
“Bizzy’s lawyer has a copy; I know he does.”
“Let’s not involve either of them for now. We don’t want them getting in the way.”
Nevaeh paused again.
“If my stepmother…” she said.“It’ll be our little secret,” Nevaeh told me.So, yeah. I’ve taken the Page 69 Test for several other of my novels and the results weren’t that spectacular. But for Man in the Water it works just fine.
Secrets, my inner voice said. As if you don’t have enough already.
My Book, The Movie: The Last Kind Word.
The Page 69 Test: The Last Kind Word.
The Page 69 Test: Stealing the Countess.
The Page 69 Test: What the Dead Leave Behind.
The Page 69 Test: First, Kill the Lawyers.
The Page 69 Test: In a Hard Wind.
Q&A with David Housewright.
Writers Read: David Housewright.
--Marshal Zeringue