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THE NAKED DETECTIVE

Though Amsterdam’s not as much fun as the geezers and innocents of Shames’s first seven novels (Welcome to Paradise, 1999,...

Since making his bundle back in Jersey, Pete Amsterdam’s leading a Key West regimen of late mornings, tennis, Chardonnay, and a p.i. license he maintains strictly as a tax dodge—until he meets the leggy blond client he can’t refuse, partly because showing her out would require him to bolt nude from his hot tub, partly because the charming she turns out to be an equally intriguing he, but mostly because his would-be client turns up dead the next morning on Tank Island. The late Kenny Lukens had run off to the Bahamas just as fast as his long, long legs could carry him after relieving his boss, Lefty Ortega, of two payroll pouches, one containing the night’s receipts from Lefty’s bar, the other something Lefty wanted back even more. Kenny’s friends and foes alike gang up on the reluctant Amsterdam, prodding him to discover just what Kenny had buried on Tank Island and why he came back to unbury it. Soon after lissome yoga instructor Maggie plies Pete with herbal tea, he’s scrambling off the side of her dry-docked trawler for a closer look at Kenny’s boat. Inspired by a note Ortega’s daughter Lydia passes him at Lefty’s funeral, he stares down her bodyguard to get into her condo. He even takes a turn at straight-up interrogation, questioning Lydia’s partner Mickey Veale about Ortega’s business. But before long, it’s his own curiosity and long-buried ambition that propel him toward full-fledged sleuthing.

Though Amsterdam’s not as much fun as the geezers and innocents of Shames’s first seven novels (Welcome to Paradise, 1999, etc.), his debut still gets him off to a worthy start.

Pub Date: June 1, 2000

ISBN: 0-375-50253-X

Page Count: 240

Publisher: Villard

Review Posted Online: May 19, 2010

Kirkus Reviews Issue: May 1, 2000

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PEACH COBBLER MURDER

Although she ties up false leads a little too quickly, Hannah’s sixth—even without the 14 recipes—would be her tastiest yet.

Trouble brews along with decaf when the poisonous Quinn sisters open a bakery across the street from The Cookie Jar.

At first, Hannah Swenson (Sugar Cookie Murder, 2004, etc.) can’t believe her once-loyal customers are streaming through the front door of the Magnolia Blossom Bakery. Operated by seductive Shawna Lee Quinn and bankrolled by her rich-bitch sister Vanessa, who inherited piles of cash when her octogenarian husband expired last year, the upscale eatery offers rustic Lake Eden classy décor and an irresistible stream of free-lunch contests that have The Cookie Jar teetering on the brink of bankruptcy. Although Hannah’s sometime boyfriend, dentist Norman Rhoades, assures her that Shawna Lee’s soggy confection can’t hold a candle to her Minnesota Peach Cobbler, Hannah’s not so sure, especially since she sees her other-time boyfriend Mike Kingston’s Hummer parked behind the Magnolia Blossom with suspicious frequency. So when Shawna Lee gets killed, it's a good thing that Hannah has an ironclad alibi: Along with most of Lake Eden, she’s at St. Peter’s Catholic Church watching her partner, Lisa Herman, marry sheriff Herb Beesman. In fact, one of the few Lake Edenites missing from the ceremony is Mike, whose conspicuous absence persuades Hannah that she’d better put her rhubarb custard cake on hold while she gets to the bottom of the mystery.

Although she ties up false leads a little too quickly, Hannah’s sixth—even without the 14 recipes—would be her tastiest yet.

Pub Date: March 1, 2005

ISBN: 0-7582-0154-0

Page Count: 320

Publisher: Kensington

Review Posted Online: May 19, 2010

Kirkus Reviews Issue: Feb. 15, 2005

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A GREAT RECKONING

A chilling story that's also filled with hope—a beloved Penny trademark.

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  • Kirkus Reviews'
    Best Books Of 2016


  • New York Times Bestseller

Within a police force, some members must be trained in the science, and art, of solving murders. But does this training create people highly capable of committing them?

In Penny’s 12th Gamache novel, the former chief inspector takes up a new post. He’s not back to active investigating—not after finally having the chance to heal in the Québécois village of Three Pines. But he can’t pass up the chance to complete his yearslong fight to end corruption within the Sûreté. By taking the job as commander of the Sûreté Academy, he can clean the rot from its wealthiest source—the impressionable minds of cadet trainees. But Gamache makes a questionable decision in choosing to fight fire with fire. He decides to keep the most corrupt staff member, Serge “the Duke” Leduc, the former No. 2 of the Academy. Gamache’s choices verge on madness when he announces he will also bring on Michel Brébeuf—the original domino to fall within the Sûreté—as an example of how corruption can ruin you. In his lessons, Gamache invites his cadets to internalize these mottos: “Don't trust everything you think”—words for bettering their minds and investigative skills—as well as “a man's foes shall be they of his own household,” from Matthew 10:36—words of warning for what they may face ahead. These lessons become all too relevant when the Duke is found murdered and it’s clear the murderer is one of them. And then a copy of an old map is found at the crime scene, the same map Gamache is using as an exercise with four cadets he has brought under his wing and into his home (one lost soul in particular, freshman Amelia Choquet). Gamache is forced to accept that Leduc’s grip on the Academy is stronger and more suffocating than he thought possible. Is the household he has vowed to protect more unsafe than ever before? Young, learning minds are precious things, and Penny is here to make us aware of the evil out there, eager for a chance to mold—and poison—them.

A chilling story that's also filled with hope—a beloved Penny trademark.

Pub Date: Aug. 30, 2016

ISBN: 978-1-250-02213-4

Page Count: 400

Publisher: Minotaur

Review Posted Online: May 31, 2016

Kirkus Reviews Issue: June 15, 2016

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