by Carola Dunn ‧ RELEASE DATE: Feb. 1, 2001
Dunn’s tenth—short on detection, long on atmosphere, adventure, and Daisy—will appeal mainly to Dalrymple diehards.
Her wild Atlantic crossing (To Davy Jones Below, 2001) behind her, Daisy Fletcher—the Honorable Daisy Dalrymple that was—now settled comfortably in the genteelly bohemian Hotel Chelsea, faces two challenges: making her ancient Remington typewriter fit to produce the series of travel articles for Abroad magazine that brought her across the pond, and making sense of the gabble the natives talk. Fortunately, a brief ride on a tram—er, streetcar—takes her to the Flatiron building, where, outside the offices of Sigurd Thorwald, her editor, she witnesses the shooting of Chelsea neighbor Otis Carmody, an investigative reporter whose body lands on top of the Flatiron’s main lift—um, elevator. With a juicy murder to solve, it won’t take long for Daisy to fit right into the beat of 1920s New York, even though Tammany Hall stooges Sgt. Gillian and D.A. Rosenblatt are clearly hopeless bumblers. Daisy soon learns from Kevin, the Chelsea’s observant elevator boy, and his chambermaid sister Bridget that Carmody was in the middle of a messy separation from his wife, Elva, who prefers the company of shady industrialist Barton Bender. The elderly Misses Cabot are almost as much help as hapless FBI agent Lambert is a hindrance. But the real hero is Daisy’s husband Alec, who cuts short his consultation with J. Edgar Hoover to help his wife corner a murderer.
Dunn’s tenth—short on detection, long on atmosphere, adventure, and Daisy—will appeal mainly to Dalrymple diehards.Pub Date: Feb. 1, 2001
ISBN: 0-312-27284-7
Page Count: 256
Publisher: Minotaur
Review Posted Online: May 19, 2010
Kirkus Reviews Issue: Jan. 15, 2002
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by Cleo Coyle ‧ RELEASE DATE: Dec. 3, 2019
An unsettling, often scary account of how memory loss affects a strong woman’s life.
A coffeehouse manager awakens on a park bench minus much of her memory.
Clare Cosi wakes up stiff and cold in Washington Square Park. Though there are lots of things she doesn’t remember, she does know that she’ll be safe at the Village Blend coffeehouse, where she’s greeted with joy and told that she’s been missing for four days. When her ex-husband, Matteo Allegro, and his mother, Madame Blanche Allegro Dubois, the coffee shop's owner, arrive on the scene, they realize she’s forgotten the last 15 years of her life and thinks she’s living in New Jersey with her young daughter, Joy. Hospitalized, she fails to recognize both Joy, now a grown-up, and her current fiance, Detective Mike Quinn. Celebrity psychiatrist Dr. Dominic Lorca takes over Clare’s care and insists she be moved to an upstate facility. Despite pulling every string available, Mike can’t free her from Lorca even though she’s a witness in the case of missing heiress Annette Brewster. Clare, no shrinking violet, pretends to take her drugs but is dying for a cup of coffee. Madame Blanche, Matteo, and Tucker Burton, the Village Blend’s assistant manager, hatch a plan to bust Clare free and find a place where she can be relaxed and open to stimuli that will help revive her memory. But Clare is loath to go with Matteo, who cheated on her repeatedly, even though their current relationship is good. Talking with her friends evokes memories of her past detective work (Shot in the Dark, 2018, etc.), and she struggles to relive her most recent days, some of which she spent with Annette, who’d arranged a private tasting of wedding cakes in the hotel she owns. Clare, Mike, and Matteo end up hiding out in the Hamptons from the police and a killer who’s stalking her.
An unsettling, often scary account of how memory loss affects a strong woman’s life.Pub Date: Dec. 3, 2019
ISBN: 978-0-451-48887-9
Page Count: 368
Publisher: Berkley
Review Posted Online: Oct. 13, 2019
Kirkus Reviews Issue: Nov. 1, 2019
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by Diane Chamberlain ‧ RELEASE DATE: Jan. 14, 2020
An engaging, well-researched, and sometimes thought-provoking art mystery.
A tale of two artists, living 78 years apart in a small Southern town, and the third artist who links them.
The fates of two white painters in Edenton, North Carolina, intertwine with the legacy of a third, that of Jesse Jameson Williams, a prominent African American artist with Edenton roots. In 2018, the recently deceased Jesse has left a very unusual will. In life, Jesse paid his success forward by helping underdog artists. Morgan Christopher, the last, posthumous recipient of Jesse’s largesse, can’t imagine why he chose her, a complete stranger who is doing time for an alcohol-related crash that left another driver paralyzed. Released on an early parole engineered by Jesse’s daughter, Lisa, Morgan will receive $50,000 to restore a mural painted by one Anna Dale in 1940 in time for a gallery opening on Aug. 5, 2018. If Morgan misses this deadline, not only is her deal off, but Lisa will, due to a puzzling, thinly motivated condition of Jesse’s will, lose her childhood home. In an alternating narrative, Anna, winner of a U.S. Treasury Department competition, has been sent from her native New Jersey to paint a mural for the Edenton post office. Anna has zero familiarity with the South, particularly with Jim Crow. She recognizes Jesse’s exceptional talent and mentors him, to the ire of Edenton’s white establishment. Martin Drapple, a local portraitist rejected in the competition, is at first a good sport, when he’s sober, until, somewhat too suddenly, he’s neither. Issues of addiction and mental illness are foremost in both past and present. Anna’s late mother had manic episodes. Morgan’s estranged parents are unrepentant boozers. And Anna’s mural of civic pride is decidedly strange. One of the strengths here is the creditable depiction of the painter’s process, in Anna’s case, and the restorer’s art, in Morgan’s. Despite the fraught circumstances challenging all three painters, conflict is lacking. The 1940 racial tensions are unrealistically mild, and Jesse’s testamentary testiness is not mined for its full stakes-raising potential.
An engaging, well-researched, and sometimes thought-provoking art mystery.Pub Date: Jan. 14, 2020
ISBN: 978-1-250-08733-1
Page Count: 400
Publisher: St. Martin's
Review Posted Online: Oct. 13, 2019
Kirkus Reviews Issue: Nov. 1, 2019
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