by Cara Black ‧ RELEASE DATE: March 1, 2011
The ideal mix of the personal, the political, the puzzling and the Parisian make Aimée’s latest a perfect pleasure.
Murder strikes close to home when Aimée Leduc (Murder in Palais Royal, 2009, etc.) finds her godfather charged with a crime passionelle.
“Something’s going on with Xavierre,” Commissaire Morbier tells his goddaughter. So while he’s off in Lyon on a case, Aimée and her partner René Friant crash the wedding rehearsal for Xavierre’s daughter at her upscale townhome in Passy. They find the mother of the bride frazzled, and no wonder. Within minutes, Xavierre is lying in the garden dead, leaving her daughter Irati hysterical in the arms of Robbé, her fiancé. Still worse, the police arrest Morbier, clapping him in a cell with Cheb DJ, a violent felon Morbier’s locked up many times. While DJ tries to win his release by beating information out of his cellmate, Aimée looks for clues near Place Victor Hugo, starting with the studio of Agustino, a painter who knew fellow Basque Xavierre from their school days in Bayonne. Irati too seems mixed up in the culture wars, as Aimée concludes when she finds a pamphlet from the separatist group Euskadi Action in her mail. Now that the results of the long-awaited Basque referendum are to be announced at the Marmottan Museum, will the nationalists give sabotage a rest? More murders, the kidnapping of a Spanish princess, and a frantic message from Agustino convince Aimée that Xavierre’s death has more to do with politics than passion.
The ideal mix of the personal, the political, the puzzling and the Parisian make Aimée’s latest a perfect pleasure.Pub Date: March 1, 2011
ISBN: 978-1-56947-882-0
Page Count: 288
Publisher: Soho
Review Posted Online: Jan. 8, 2011
Kirkus Reviews Issue: Jan. 15, 2011
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by Deanna Raybourn ‧ RELEASE DATE: Sept. 1, 2015
A thrilling—and hilarious—beginning to a promising new series.
Determined to live an independent life, Veronica Speedwell is anything but a proper Victorian lady. So when her home is attacked during her aunt’s funeral, a rollicking adventure ensues.
Mastermind of the charming Lady Grey Mysteries series, Raybourn (Bonfire Night, 2014, etc.) introduces her latest feisty heroine, deftly twining together suspense, romance, and cracking good dialogue. Certainly, lepidoptery should be a suitable hobby for a lady; chasing pretty things like butterflies can hold no dangers. But Veronica, a foundling raised from birth by her two late aunts, has taken things a little too far: by capturing and selling highly sought-after butterflies, she’s financed her own expeditions to exotic locations, where she’s indulged in emotionally careful yet physically torrid affairs. After rescuing Veronica from her attacker, Baron von Stauffenbach whisks her to London, depositing her in the care of the enigmatic Mr. Stoker, a brooding, Byronic hero of the natural history persuasion. Before the Baron can return to tell Veronica what he knows of her mother, he's found dead, and the police like Stoker for a suspect. Stoker and Veronica partner up to find the real culprit, hurtling pell-mell into a captivatingly intricate plot, including a traveling circus, the fetid Thames, and the Tower of London, as they dodge villains with murky motives and hulking henchmen. Soon, they realize that Stauffer’s death may be connected to the mystery of Veronica’s birth parents, and Stoker himself has a few secrets to discover, including what really happened on his disastrous expedition to the Amazon, which left him scarred and disgraced. As Veronica and Stoker careen through dastardly plot twists, they match wits, bantering with skill worthy of Tracey and Hepburn.
A thrilling—and hilarious—beginning to a promising new series.Pub Date: Sept. 1, 2015
ISBN: 978-0-451-47601-2
Page Count: 352
Publisher: New American Library
Review Posted Online: July 14, 2015
Kirkus Reviews Issue: Aug. 1, 2015
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by Steven F. Havill ‧ RELEASE DATE: March 17, 2020
A character-driven procedural that subordinates its mystery to a strong sense of place and family ties.
A poor New Mexico border county’s residents are proud of an unusual tourist attraction and concerned about a possible new development that could threaten it, the jobs it provides, and ultimately the county’s peace.
Posadas County (Lies Come Easy, 2018, etc.) is home to NightZone, a combination of astronomical observatory, high-end hotel, restaurant, and walking trails that draws tourists from all over the world, most arriving on a purpose-built narrow-gauge train from the county seat. Taciturn sheriff Bobby Torrez sends his more socially adept undersheriff, Estelle Reyes-Guzman, to the county commissioners meeting, where developer Kyle Thompson, who just bought a large tract of land next to the observatory, is expected to make a presentation. Instead of coming, Kyle sends word that he wants to meet with Miles Waddell, who used part of the hefty fortune he inherited to finance NightZone and worries that a large development will ruin the near-total darkness the observatory needs. Eventually Kyle sends along his gun-toting wife, Lydia, who accepts Miles’ offer of a room at NightZone, has a pleasant chat with Miles and Estelle, reveals nothing of Kyle’s plans, but later tells Estelle that he doesn’t want to ruin NightZone. The sheriffs have other fish to fry when a gunman shoots up the local newspaper office and wounds two workers. The weapon is a .22 aimed with precision from a stolen vehicle. Torrez suspects his wild nephew, Quentin, may be involved. That case pales when Kyle Thompson either falls or is pushed off a mesa to his death. The way his body lands indicates murder, and his wife isn’t willing to leave the case to the police. Both Thompsons were New York State Police officers, so Lydia has investigative skills, but her pain may lead her into danger. The experienced sheriffs must unravel both cases in Havill’s 24th Posadas mystery.
A character-driven procedural that subordinates its mystery to a strong sense of place and family ties.Pub Date: March 17, 2020
ISBN: 978-1-4926-9909-5
Page Count: 304
Publisher: Poisoned Pen
Review Posted Online: Jan. 26, 2020
Kirkus Reviews Issue: Feb. 15, 2020
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