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SCENT OF DANGER

Although Durgin’s debut mystery is slow-paced and not all that mysterious, the characters, especially Sully, have a certain...

A breathing-impaired veterinarian and his keen-nosed beagle combine their complementary skills to catch a killer.

Dale Kinsall has moved from Ohio to the Flagstaff area to help his severe asthma problem, exacerbated by a fire at his clinic. While the clinic is being refurbished, Dale is forced to work part time to avoid the dust. But he gets caught up in a possible murder case when strange notes start to appear at the clinic, challenging him to solve a puzzle. Dale’s girlfriend Laura is housing her cousin, whose son is fighting for his life after developing the deadly Hanta virus. Although the virus is endemic to the Southwest, it hasn’t appeared recently, and they have no idea how he got it. The investigator who shows the most promise is Sully Beagle, whom Dale is training as a show dog. Sully’s newly revealed talents as a mouser cause considerable excitement, since mice carry Hanta. When Laura starts feeling ill, Sully sniffs out a mouse nest in her air conditioner. After rushing her to the hospital, Dale sets out to track down the culprit who’s apparently using Hanta as a murder weapon.

Although Durgin’s debut mystery is slow-paced and not all that mysterious, the characters, especially Sully, have a certain charm that will appeal to canine fanciers.

Pub Date: Dec. 10, 2008

ISBN: 978-1-59414-675-6

Page Count: 280

Publisher: Five Star/Gale Cengage

Review Posted Online: May 19, 2010

Kirkus Reviews Issue: Oct. 1, 2008

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THE KILLING HOUR

Too much psychobabble, technobabble, and envirobabble, yet the appeal of the young sleuths (smart, funny, tough) almost...

A cunning serial killer plays devilish mind games with his would-be captors—and what else is new?

Not much. Well, he does have this penchant for pluralizing. That is, he grabs his young women in pairs. Why pairs? He uses corpse one for the planting of clues sufficient to allow law enforcement—if law enforcement is astute enough—to find corpse two alive. “Eco-Killer,” he’s been tabbed because in addition to his passion for gamesmanship, he seems to have an ongoing love-hate relationship with the environment. From Georgia, scene of the first killings, we shift to Virginia, where Special Agent Mac McCormack of the Georgia Bureau of Investigation has been on the case from the outset. He’s been directed to Virginia by a barrage of enigmatic phone calls from someone who claims to know how the serial killer’s sly and twisted mind works. In Quantico, a training ground for FBI agents as well as for US Marines, Mac meets fledgling feebie Kimberly Quincy, daughter of former agent Pierce Quincy, famous throughout the service for his legendary exploits as a profiler. When the Eco-Killer strikes again, Quincy and his p.i. partner Lorraine Conner, mainstays of the series, (The Next Accident, 2001, etc.), are called in to consult, but the case really belongs to the captivating Kimberly and hunkish Mac (with their bods for sex and brains for high-powered detecting). Convinced there’s a chance to save a life if they can manage to solve the killer’s puzzle in time, the two desperately seek clues from botanists, biologists, entomologists, and a variety of other analysts. Something from here, something from there, and at last they can make the guess that plunges them deep into Virginia’s Shenandoah National Park, where the game plays out to a fiery end.

Too much psychobabble, technobabble, and envirobabble, yet the appeal of the young sleuths (smart, funny, tough) almost saves the day.

Pub Date: July 15, 2003

ISBN: 0-553-80252-6

Page Count: 325

Publisher: Bantam

Review Posted Online: May 19, 2010

Kirkus Reviews Issue: June 15, 2003

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ABOVE THE BAY OF ANGELS

A treasure trove of Victoriana, especially for foodies. More history than mystery but a truly delightful read.

A split-second decision is life-changing in this stand-alone Victorian-era mystery from Bowen (Love and Death Among the Cheetahs, 2019, etc.).

Isabella Waverly’s father is an aristocrat estranged from his family who’s fallen so far in the world that he sent his oldest daughter out to work as a servant at 15. Her only joy is learning to cook. When a girl is run over by an omnibus before her eyes, Bella automatically picks up an envelope the dead girl had been clutching. The envelope contains an invitation to apply for an under-cook position at Buckingham Palace that very day. Introducing herself as Helen Barton, Bella snags the job. She hides her new position from Louisa, the younger sister who’s marrying the son of a well-off family. She struggles to immerse herself in the persona of a girl from Yorkshire, explaining her upper-class accent by saying her father was a gentleman. The only fly in the ointment is the appearance of Helen’s brother, who blackmails her into finding a job for him, too. Bella’s passion for cooking and her work ethic soon endear her to the mostly male staff. Queen Victoria, who has an enormous appetite for rich foods, so enjoys Bella’s scones that she personally asks her to make them every day. When her majesty travels to Nice, Bella goes along and gets to put her knowledge of French to use. She develops a semiromantic friendship with the head chef at the hotel, which was built especially for the queen. Indeed, her life seems idyllic until Count Wilhelm, the betrothed of Princess Sophie, dies, ostensibly from a poisoned mushroom Bella bought in a local market. Now she must juggle cooking and a suddenly active love life as she searches for a way to end her predicament.

A treasure trove of Victoriana, especially for foodies. More history than mystery but a truly delightful read.

Pub Date: Feb. 11, 2020

ISBN: 978-1-5420-0825-9

Page Count: 348

Publisher: Lake Union Publishing

Review Posted Online: Nov. 24, 2019

Kirkus Reviews Issue: Dec. 15, 2019

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