Robodick

by Robert James Warner


Formats

Softcover
£9.75
Softcover
£9.75

Book Details

Language : English
Publication Date : 12/09/2001

Format : Softcover
Dimensions : 5x8
Page Count : 156
ISBN : 9780759621411

About the Book

Robodick is another popular Krong The Watcher story.

A man is found murdered in his bedroom. His wife has a badly beaten face. The cops figure they have another classic killing by an abused wife. Then Eddy Dix, his girlfriend Roxie Russell, and Robodick, the robot crime fighting super sleuth, arrive at the crime scene. Robodick, who has the best nose in the universe–about 100 times better than a pig's nose, which is better than a dog's nose–uses his powerful sense of smell and insists the man was murdered by someone else, not by his wife. The cops don't believe him even though the wife insists she was beat up by her husband's ex-wife after the she killed her ex-husband then ran from the house.

The cops just won't believe a robot nose can smell out crime so quickly and so easily, but Eddy and Roxie do, and so do the Watchers who made Robodick.

Robodick has many incredible abilities and nine small, round or oval robot helpers who are stored in recesses in his body.

The cops won't listen to Eddy, Roxie, and Robodick. They refuse to believe that Robodick's nose can smell out crime, which means the dead man's innocent wife will be sent to jail for life if Eddy and Roxie fail to make the cops believe in Robodick and his super nose, his super talents, and his small robot super evidence gatherers!


About the Author

Robert James Warner was born and raised in Long Beach, California, where he attended school. He was drafted into the Navy on March 9, 1944, during World War II as soon as he finished his last semester in high school. He was discharged from the Navy on June 16, 1946.

Mr. Warner went back to school, Long Beach City College, on the GI Bill, taking mechanical engineering, then switching to journalism. After about a year and a half at City College, he quit.

Mr. Warner had always been interested in writing, but he had huge handicaps to overcome: he couldn't spell (he still can't), and grammar was then and is now a mystery to him. Mr. Warner first began to write when he was about 20.

During the next few years, he wrote some songs, poetry, and short stories, but his output was quite low.

From 1947, after Mr. Warner left City College, to 1950, he had a number of different inconsequential jobs, the longest at Douglas Aircraft in Long Beach where he worked in the blueprint department for eight months. He then quit and loafed awhile.

In 1950, he enlisted in the Active Naval Reserve as a Week End Warrior so he could learn seamanship and get paid doing it. He has had a life-long love affair with boats (building his own) and fishing.

About three months later, the Korean War started and Mr. Warner was called back to active duty in the Navy Aircorp for a year, getting discharged in August 1951, serving on three aircraft carriers, operating off Korea in the China Sea, and bombing and strafing the communists!

After Korea, Mr. Warner went back to City College for awhile, then he got a job on a freighter as a deckhand and made two trips to the Hawaiian Islands (about 30 days round trip), hauling bulk sugar for C&H Sugar in Crocket California on the Sacramento River.

Leaving the ship in Crocket, he went to Santa Rosa, California, where he washed dishes in some restaurants and got a poem published in the local newspaper–a big day in his life.

Next, he went to Yosemite and washed some more dishes, and then he went home.

Mr. Warner has cleaned chicken dung from under the pens; owned and operated his own auto wrecking yard; owned his own 2nd Store; was half owner of a yacht landing; speculated in real estate; and worked at some other odd jobs, going to work for the Long Beach Fire Department in 1953 for the next 26 years and retiring in October 1979.

Mr. Warner married in 1961, had a son in 1963, and then divorced in 1973.

In 1974, Mr. Warner and his son, Jeff, drove to Alaska during the summer. On his return, Mr. Warner wrote his first novel.

Since 1974, Mr. Warner has written thirty-one novels, about 125 short stories, two Civil War books, and two poetry collections.