by Larry D. Sweazy ‧ RELEASE DATE: May 10, 2016
In truth, Sweazy gets by on the merest wisp of mystery, along with a severe economy of incidents of any kind.
Now that she’s lost her nearest neighbors, the Knudsens, to a killer (See Also Murder, 2015), it’s time for North Dakota indexer Marjorie Trumaine to lose her closest professional connection—the local librarian she constantly calls to check facts—the same way.
Not that the authorities are calling Calla Eltmore’s death murder. They’re convinced against all reason that she shot herself while she was at work at the Dickinson Public Library, where Marjorie—leaving her husband, Hank, blinded and paralyzed by a hunting accident, in the highly questionable hands of candy-striper Betty Walsh, the young girlfriend of the slain Knudsens’ son Jaeger—goes to assure herself that Calla really is gone. Later, at the viewing, Marjorie realizes that right-handed Calla never would have shot herself in the left temple. “It would take a fool not to see it,” she tells Hank, and you do have to wonder about the professionalism of Duke Parsons, acting sheriff of Stark County, and deputy Guy Reinhardt. The only person who agrees with Marjorie is the nameless woman who trips and falls on the library stairs during their first meeting and who’s carrying a copy of Men and Women that links her to Calla’s fondness for Elizabeth Barrett and Robert Browning. A second apparent suicide narrows the list of suspects without clarifying the mystery.
In truth, Sweazy gets by on the merest wisp of mystery, along with a severe economy of incidents of any kind.Pub Date: May 10, 2016
ISBN: 978-1-63388-126-6
Page Count: 244
Publisher: Seventh Street Books
Review Posted Online: Feb. 16, 2016
Kirkus Reviews Issue: March 1, 2016
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by Gillian Flynn ‧ RELEASE DATE: June 5, 2012
One of those rare thrillers whose revelations actually intensify its suspense instead of dissipating it. The final pages are...
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New York Times Bestseller
A perfect wife’s disappearance plunges her husband into a nightmare as it rips open ugly secrets about his marriage and, just maybe, his culpability in her death.
Even after they lost their jobs as magazine writers and he uprooted her from New York and spirited her off to his childhood home in North Carthage, Mo., where his ailing parents suddenly needed him at their side, Nick Dunne still acted as if everything were fine between him and his wife, Amy. His sister Margo, who’d gone partners with him on a local bar, never suspected that the marriage was fraying, and certainly never knew that Nick, who’d buried his mother and largely ducked his responsibilities to his father, stricken with Alzheimer’s, had taken one of his graduate students as a mistress. That’s because Nick and Amy were both so good at playing Mr. and Ms. Right for their audience. But that all changes the morning of their fifth anniversary when Amy vanishes with every indication of foul play. Partly because the evidence against him looks so bleak, partly because he’s so bad at communicating grief, partly because he doesn’t feel all that grief-stricken to begin with, the tide begins to turn against Nick. Neighbors who’d been eager to join the police in the search for Amy begin to gossip about him. Female talk-show hosts inveigh against him. The questions from Detective Rhonda Boney and Detective Jim Gilpin get sharper and sharper. Even Nick has to acknowledge that he hasn’t come close to being the husband he liked to think he was. But does that mean he deserves to get tagged as his wife’s killer? Interspersing the mystery of Amy’s disappearance with flashbacks from her diary, Flynn (Dark Places, 2009, etc.) shows the marriage lumbering toward collapse—and prepares the first of several foreseeable but highly effective twists.
One of those rare thrillers whose revelations actually intensify its suspense instead of dissipating it. The final pages are chilling.Pub Date: June 5, 2012
ISBN: 978-0-307-58836-4
Page Count: 432
Publisher: Crown
Review Posted Online: April 22, 2012
Kirkus Reviews Issue: May 1, 2012
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SEEN & HEARD
by Patricia Cornwell ‧ RELEASE DATE: Nov. 11, 2014
No wonder Scarpetta asks, “When did my workplace become such a soap opera?” Answer: at least 10 years ago.
Happy birthday, Dr. Kay Scarpetta. But no Florida vacation for you and your husband, FBI profiler Benton Wesley—not because President Barack Obama is visiting Cambridge, but because a deranged sniper has come to town.
Shortly after everyone’s favorite forensic pathologist (Dust, 2013, etc.) receives a sinister email from a correspondent dubbed Copperhead, she goes outside to find seven pennies—all polished, all turned heads-up, all dated 1981—on her garden wall. Clearly there’s trouble afoot, though she’s not sure what form it will take until five minutes later, when a call from her old friend and former employee Pete Marino, now a detective with the Cambridge Police, summons her to the scene of a shooting. Jamal Nari was a high school music teacher who became a minor celebrity when his name was mistakenly placed on a terrorist watch list; he claimed government persecution, and he ended up having a beer with the president. Now he’s in the news for quite a different reason. Bizarrely, the first tweets announcing his death seem to have preceded it by 45 minutes. And Leo Gantz, a student at Nari’s school, has confessed to his murder, even though he couldn’t possibly have done it. But these complications are only the prelude to a banquet of homicide past and present, as Scarpetta and Marino realize when they link Nari’s murder to a series of killings in New Jersey. For a while, the peripheral presence of the president makes you wonder if this will be the case that finally takes the primary focus off the investigator’s private life. But most of the characters are members of Scarpetta’s entourage, the main conflicts involve infighting among the regulars, and the killer turns out to be a familiar nemesis Scarpetta thought she’d left for dead several installments back. As if.
Pub Date: Nov. 11, 2014
ISBN: 978-0-06-232534-1
Page Count: 400
Publisher: Morrow/HarperCollins
Review Posted Online: July 22, 2014
Kirkus Reviews Issue: Sept. 15, 2014
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