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SURVIVORS WILL BE SHOT AGAIN

The ambling plot makes room for a few sharp deductions and the usual mild humor—nothing to frighten the horses or raise...

A string of low-level burglaries plagues Blacklin County, Texas, spelling trouble for Sheriff Dan Rhodes and his deputies (Between the Living and the Dead, 2015, etc.) and two dead men.

Ex–football star Billy Bacon, now a sedentary loan officer, has been robbed of a saddle and its stand. Melvin Hunt has lost a high-end welding rig. The neighbors have felt free to speculate why rancher Able Terrell has so far been immune from the thefts. The stakes rise, though not by all that much, when Rhodes, fresh from besting an armed convenience store robber by throwing a loaf of bread at him, responds to a call from Billy’s ranch and ends up not only taking his report of the latest theft, but discovering the body of Melvin Hunt in Billy’s barn, shot two times. The death is particularly awkward for Billy, who’s just taken down a No Trespassing sign that warned, “TRESPASSERS WILL BE SHOT. SURVIVORS WILL BE SHOT AGAIN.” He assures the sheriff that he knows nothing about Melvin’s death—well, apart from having found the corpse himself before calling the authorities—or about the marijuana growing in one of his fields or about the alligator penned up nearby, presumably to guard the crop. As it turns out, Billy isn’t the only local whose property has been partly turned over to the cultivation of cannabis, and Melvin isn’t the only local who’s due to be shot twice. Luckily, that alligator turns up in exactly the right time and place to make everything right again.

The ambling plot makes room for a few sharp deductions and the usual mild humor—nothing to frighten the horses or raise fans’ blood pressure.

Pub Date: Aug. 9, 2016

ISBN: 978-1-250-07852-0

Page Count: 272

Publisher: Minotaur

Review Posted Online: May 16, 2016

Kirkus Reviews Issue: June 1, 2016

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DEVIL'S FOOD CAKE MURDER

Fluke’s latest puzzler boasts 25 recipes and even more surprises.

A cruise may be romantic for Lake Eden’s Lutheran minister and his wife, but it’s murder for Hannah Swensen (Gingerbread Cookie Murder, 2010, etc.) and her pals.

Now that his childhood friend Matthew Walters has taken over his pastoral duties for two weeks, Rev. Bob Knudson can finally take his bride Claire on a belated honeymoon. Grandma Knudson’s willing to look after Matthew, just as she did when he and his cousin Paul stayed in Lake Eden as a teenager. And she’s even willing to keep an eye on Pete Nunke’s mynah, who’s staying in the rectory while Pete recovers from back surgery. Of course Hannah keeps Grandma Knudson well stocked with Butterscotch Bonanza Bars and Nutmeg Snaps from The Cookie Jar, her coffee shop. But when one of Hannah’s visits ends with the discovery of Matthew’s body face down in a piece of Red Devil’s Food Cake (recipe included), she leaves Grandma Knudson in the care of Clara and Marguerite Hollenbeck to stalk a killer. Hannah’s partner Lisa Beeseman entertains customers with tales of the grisly find while Hannah enlists sisters Andrea and Michelle to question potential suspects. They even stop at the skuzzy Eagle roadhouse to question Lenny Peske about the dollar coin he gave Lisa as a tip. Hannah’s main partner-in-crime-prevention, Norman Rhodes, on the other hand, has seemed strangely preoccupied ever since his ex-fiancée, Beverly Thorndike, joined his dental practice. Will Claire and Bob’s idyllic adventure spell romantic disaster for Lake Eden’s premier sleuth?

Fluke’s latest puzzler boasts 25 recipes and even more surprises.

Pub Date: March 1, 2011

ISBN: 978-0-7582-3491-9

Page Count: 304

Publisher: Kensington

Review Posted Online: April 4, 2011

Kirkus Reviews Issue: Jan. 15, 2011

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THE K TEAM

Don’t be fooled by the brand-new packaging. If you liked Rosenfelt’s rollicking previous series, you’ll like this one too.

The creator of Paterson attorney Andy Carpenter’s dog-friendly mysteries launches a new series starring several of Andy’s friends and enemies, including the canine client he represented in Dachshund Through the Snow (2019), with a supporting role for Andy himself.

Judge Henry “Hatchet” Henderson, whose courtroom has provided the arena for so many of Andy’s shenanigans, is threatened with blackmail, and he wants the newly formed K Team—retired cop Corey Douglas; his canine partner, Simon Garfunkel; Andy’s fearsome investigator, Marcus Clark; and Andy’s wife, Laurie Collins—to identify and neutralize the threat, which he plans to keep confidential by paying Andy a dollar to take the case as his lawyer. At first the team’s inquiries into which of Henderson’s recent cases (the manslaughter conviction of ex-boxer John Lowry? The freeing of self-confessed embezzler Nina Williams on a legal technicality? The acquittal of Ponzi-scheming broker Drew Lockman?) provoked the blackmail lead nowhere. Then they lead to hints of a financial manipulation conspiracy on a grand scale. By the time they lead to Equi-net, an electronic communications network that handles securities trades for people who’d like to keep them private, five people have been murdered, with more slated to follow. The one place they don’t lead is to continued confidentiality, as Henderson learns to his sorrow. The net of deceptions, double-crosses, and professional assassinations gets pretty knotty, but although the conspiracy involves an awful lot of guilty parties, the gimmick behind all their criminal activity is appealingly simple. Through it all, Corey serves as an investigator and narrator every bit as ebullient as Andy and a lot more diligent. In fact, longtime fans may wonder why Rosenfelt saw the need to create a new series that follows the pattern of Andy’s 20 successful cases so closely. If he thought Paterson needed more wiseacre crime fighters, he was undoubtedly right.

Don’t be fooled by the brand-new packaging. If you liked Rosenfelt’s rollicking previous series, you’ll like this one too.

Pub Date: March 24, 2020

ISBN: 978-1-250-25719-2

Page Count: 304

Publisher: Minotaur

Review Posted Online: Dec. 22, 2019

Kirkus Reviews Issue: Jan. 15, 2020

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