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LAST DANCE

The best review comes early, in the form of a presidential tweet: “LAPD can’t stop illegals, loses ballerina. SAD.”

Fleishman introduces a seen-it-all LA cop to a few things he’s never seen.

Whatever killed 42-year-old ballerina Katrina Ivanovna didn’t leave a mark on her. And since her body vanishes from the morgue before an autopsy, it’s anybody’s guess what killed her. Nor are the facts about her pre-decease much more definite. It’s clear that she considered her starring role in choreographer Andreas Stein’s new production of Giselle her last chance for a comeback, clear that she worried that her body was no longer equal to the demands of the role, and clear that she popped pills and accepted new sex partners with abandon. But what links might her Kremlin-connected mother have forged to Mickey (ne Mikhail) Orlov, the Hollywood producer whose shadowy past, perhaps including KGB membership, may have involved meddling in the 2016 U.S. presidential election? And why would anyone want to steal the body Katrina felt had betrayed her? The detective on the case, the LAPD’s Sam Carver, talks a great game, alternating between laconic dialogue and appealingly quotable reflections as he fights off his memories of Dylan Cross, the woman who escaped after taking him prisoner and confessing that she’d killed two men who’d raped her. But neither Carver nor his creator ever weaves together all the busy lines of the episodic plot, and by the end, he can only conclude: “The case isn’t solved, but the guilty are dead.”

The best review comes early, in the form of a presidential tweet: “LAPD can’t stop illegals, loses ballerina. SAD.”

Pub Date: Nov. 10, 2020

ISBN: 978-1-982517-32-8

Page Count: 320

Publisher: Blackstone

Review Posted Online: July 28, 2020

Kirkus Reviews Issue: Aug. 15, 2020

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MURDER AT AN IRISH CHIPPER

Irish charm, plenty of suspects, and some strange twists make for a winning combination.

A much-delayed honeymoon to the seacoast turns into a murder hunt.

Garda Siobhán O’Sullivan and her husband, Detective Sergeant Macdara Flannery, have escaped the heat in their hometown by traveling to coastal Lahinch, taking along Siobhán’s five siblings. Upon arrival they check out two chip shops, Mr. Chips and Mrs. Chips, which are across the street from each other, and learn that Mr. Chips’ banner and mural have just been vandalized. The dueling owners went through a nasty divorce after Mr. Chips’ affair with Mrs. Chips’ best friend, so it seems likely that his ex-wife was the vandal. The line of people waiting outside Mrs. Chips, which should have been open by now but isn’t, includes a restaurant critic, a fish supplier, a cooking oil supplier, and a man who’s come to install a new vent hood. Because they can’t get into the shop, Macdara calls local handyman John Healy, who owns the inn where the family is staying. Once inside, they find Mrs. Chips dead. Although she appears to have fallen from a ladder, Siobhán has a hunch that she was murdered. The local Gardai arrive, headed by Detective Sergeant Liam Healy, the innkeeper’s grandson, who wants to believe Mrs. Chips’ death is an accident but is willing to consider murder. Macdara just wants to be a man of leisure, but Siobhán, who can never let a puzzle go unsolved, starts asking questions while her family members enjoy themselves and pursue new romantic attachments. Mrs. Chips had plenty of enemies, but when the next to die is John Healy, Siobhán and Macdara realize this case will be more complicated than they thought.

Irish charm, plenty of suspects, and some strange twists make for a winning combination.

Pub Date: Feb. 20, 2024

ISBN: 9781496744449

Page Count: 304

Publisher: Kensington

Review Posted Online: Nov. 4, 2023

Kirkus Reviews Issue: Dec. 1, 2023

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JANE AND THE FINAL MYSTERY

An appropriately decorous, if not terribly mystifying, valediction for a surprisingly resourceful sleuth.

Though it’s set in an insular English boarding school, the fictional Jane Austen’s 15th and final case strikes uncomfortably close to home.

At first the death of Arthur Prendergast, a bullying prefect at Winchester College, is a cause for rejoicing for William Heathcote, the nephew of Jane’s dear friend Alethea Bigg, whose stutter made him a natural target for Prenders’ daily torments. But several rapid developments dramatically reverse William’s feelings. The overbearing prefect didn’t throw himself into the culvert in which he apparently drowned but was bashed on the head beforehand. The note inviting Prenders to a meeting there was written by William himself. And after Peter Insley, the prefect’s chief disciple, testifies to a coroner’s jury that William had been involved in an unseemly relationship with a local woman, William, who’s also suspected of starting a suspicious fire at the college, is indicted for Prendergast’s murder and carried off to jail. The fatal bout of apoplexy of Baronet Frederick Beaumont, the prefect’s father, signals further troubles that persist beyond William’s arrest. Luckily, Jane, alerted by her nephew Edward, a Winchester alumnus who’s remained interested in the college, is on the case. Despite the gnawing illness that will soon end her life at 41, she descends sedately but incisively on the college, raising questions no one else dares to raise with the headmaster, Dr. Gabell, and his elderly and resentful second-in-command, Ruthven Clarke, and eventually uncovering a secret birthright that provides a motive for a suspect whom many readers will have been watching alertly from the beginning.

An appropriately decorous, if not terribly mystifying, valediction for a surprisingly resourceful sleuth.

Pub Date: Oct. 24, 2023

ISBN: 9781641295055

Page Count: 312

Publisher: Soho Crime

Review Posted Online: July 26, 2023

Kirkus Reviews Issue: Aug. 15, 2023

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