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DEATH IN REEL TIME

Bonner’s chatty, huggy club (Paging the Dead, 2013) returns to sort out family trees and solve murders at a leisurely pace...

A North Carolina family-research specialist and her psychic friend take on a murder in the present and a mystery from the past.

Genealogist Sophreena McClure, Esme Sabatier and the other members of an unofficial club in the town of Morningside plan to give a present of family research to their friend Olivia Clement. Although Olivia’s always wanted to know more about her father, who ran off before she was born, her friends warn her that she might not like what she learns. But Olivia, who wants to know the truth, turns over boxes of papers and diaries from her recently deceased aunt Celestine to the researchers. Tony Barrett, a former student of Olivia’s daughter Beth, offers to make a video scrapbook to accompany the print versions, despite Esme’s wariness of newfangled media. Esme has her own resources that only Sophreena knows about—signs, symbols and occasional voices from those who’ve gone on before. She and Sophreena have barely started the project when Beth’s controlling husband, Blaine Branch, is found floating in a lake. Although Esme’s beau, Detective Denny Carlson, is reluctant to disrupt a family he knows and likes, he’s obligated to investigate Beth, her brother and Blaine’s associates. Tony’s troubled past brings him under suspicion as well. While he uses his technological skills to help Sophreena and Esme with Blaine’s murder—and Sophreena does research into the unknown aspects of her own family history—they’re also getting messages from Celestine, who keeps telling Esme that something’s not right.

Bonner’s chatty, huggy club (Paging the Dead, 2013) returns to sort out family trees and solve murders at a leisurely pace that keeps this cozy from standing out—until what seems like a giveaway leads to a surprising climax.

Pub Date: March 11, 2014

ISBN: 978-1-4516-6187-3

Page Count: 320

Publisher: Gallery Books/Simon & Schuster

Review Posted Online: Feb. 16, 2014

Kirkus Reviews Issue: March 1, 2014

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WAY DOWN ON THE HIGH LONELY

Looks like Neal Carey, the peripatetic agent of that free- lance justice troop Friends of the Family, will never get back to New York to write his dissertation on Tobias Smollett. This time he's sprung from three years in a Chinese monastery (The Trail to Buddha's Mirror, 1992) only to be sent undercover as a ranch-hand in the Nevada plains to scout out the Sons of Seth, a white- supremacist flock that's his best hope for locating two-year-old Cody McCall, snatched from his Hollywood mother during a paternal weekend. Neal settles in deep, of course, and his ritual ordeals- -having to sell out the rancher who took him in, breaking off his romance with tough schoolmarm Karen Hawley, going up against rotten-apple Cal Strekker, getting ordered to kill his Friendly mentor Joe Graham—are as predictable as the trademark dose of mysticism as the bodies pile up, and as the certainty that when the dust settles, Neal won't be back at school. Winslow's Aryan crazies don't have the threatening solidity of Stephen Greenleaf's (Southern Cross, p. 1102 ), but Neal's latest adventure is full of entertaining derring-do.

Pub Date: Nov. 16, 1993

ISBN: 0-312-09934-7

Page Count: 288

Publisher: St. Martin's

Review Posted Online: May 19, 2010

Kirkus Reviews Issue: Sept. 15, 1993

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CHRISTMAS COCOA MURDER

Three quick, enjoyable reads to get you in a murderous Christmas spirit.

Three familiar sleuths each get a turn in this trio of cozy Christmas mysteries.

First, O’Connor (Murder in Galway, 2019, etc.) dives into Siobhán O’Sullivan’s past. Just graduated from the Garda College and not due to report for duty until the New Year, she’s busy preparing for Christmas when she sees a sign advertising a missing dog and links the disappearance to that of her own family dog and others around town. When the town Santy, Paddy O’Shea, is discovered floating dead in a dunk tank he’s filled with hot chocolate, all the missing dogs are also found, waiting in vain to be part of his extravagant show. Now Siobhán must help catch Santy's killer. Next up, Day (Strangled Eggs and Ham, 2019, etc.) presents South Lick, Indiana, cafe/country store owner Robbie Jordan, whose boyfriend Abe’s father, Howard O’Neill, has secretly acquired Cocoa, a rescued Lab puppy, as a Christmas gift for Abe’s son, Sean. When Howard’s business associate, Jed Greenberg, is found dead on an icy sidewalk, tangled in Cocoa’s leash, it turns out to be murder. Though Jed had plenty of enemies, Howard is a particularly choice suspect because he’d just learned that Jed had cheated him in a business deal. In the final tale, Erickson (Death by Café Mocha, 2019, etc.) features cafe/bookstore owner Krissy Hancock, a locally renowned sleuth who reluctantly accompanies her friend Rita Jablonski to a remote warehouse, where Lewis Coates, whose attention to detail is obsessive, has installed an escape room. Each member of the small group is given their own room whose door code they must determine from cryptic clues. They all manage to escape to a large locked room where they find the corpse of Coates. A prick Krissy finds on his finger and traces to a trick mug strongly suggests that one of the players is also a killer.

Three quick, enjoyable reads to get you in a murderous Christmas spirit.

Pub Date: Sept. 24, 2019

ISBN: 978-1-4967-2360-4

Page Count: 320

Publisher: Kensington

Review Posted Online: July 27, 2019

Kirkus Reviews Issue: Aug. 15, 2019

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