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EVAN AND ELLE

of the mystery’s mind-boggling confusion.

Constable Evan Evans of the North Wales Police, a one-man force in tiny Llanfair (Evanly Choirs, 1999, etc.), is intrigued

by the latest venture of his schoolteacher girlfriend Bronwen Price. Along with a few other locals, she’s taking cooking lessons from Madame Yvette Bouchard, owner and chef of the town’s new restaurant Chez Yvette. The restaurant has just begun to take off when it becomes the second victim of the town arsonist—the first a cottage recently bought and renovated by a couple from England. When a man’s body is found in the ashes of this fire, however, arrogant Peter Potter, an arson specialist, is sent to Llanfair by Headquarters. Meanwhile, Evans and his friend Sergeant Watkins try to identify the body—now known to have been stabbed to death before the fire. Trying to get past the victim’s false identity papers (found in his car) and probing Madame Yvette’s past bring to light another restaurant fire, this one in England, and a newspaper report on the death, years ago, of Yvette’s sea-loving husband. The information collected sends the intrepid pair to France for a short stay that discloses some choice truths about Madame Yvette, though occasional references to drug-runners off the Welsh coast do keep muddying the waters. Evans and the denizens of Llanfair continue to charm and amuse, but this time they’re the victims, along with the reader,

of the mystery’s mind-boggling confusion.

Pub Date: Feb. 1, 2000

ISBN: 0-312-25244-7

Page Count: 288

Publisher: Minotaur

Review Posted Online: May 19, 2010

Kirkus Reviews Issue: Jan. 15, 2000

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THE PAWFUL TRUTH

By keeping the action limited to the college and its surrounding gossip network, James presents a sharply focused story that...

Murder on a college campus leads an informal investigator into interdepartmental drama that smacks of reality TV.

His longtime work in libraries has primed Charlie Harris (Six Cats a Slayin’, 2018, etc.) for lifelong learning. So when he has the opportunity to audit a class in the history of early medieval England at his alma mater, Athena College, Charlie jumps at the opportunity. He’s heard nothing but wonderful things about professor Carey Warriner, and the first day of class exceeds his expectations. There’s even another adult learner in the course, Dixie Belle Compton, who seems equal parts student and fashion plate. When Charlie chats briefly with Dr. Warriner after class, he overhears hints of some sort of conflict between the attractive professor and Dixie Belle. Not that it’s any of his business, but Charlie wonders how the two know each other outside class. Athena is apparently a hotbed of interdepartmental romantic scandals among the faculty. Although Dr. Warriner is married to a fellow professor, it’s possible that he’s been conducting himself with Dixie Belle on an informal basis. Charlie has a history of nosing his way into town gossip, so it’s natural for him to consult with his fellow Athenians about what might be going on, especially when Dixie Belle is killed before the second class meeting. Ably aided by large and ferociously friendly Maine Coon sidekick Diesel and his latest kitten addition, Ramses, Charlie uses his connections to separate fact from fiction. Will he be able to solve the case before the killer strikes again?

By keeping the action limited to the college and its surrounding gossip network, James presents a sharply focused story that celebrates the role of the armchair investigator and his informants.

Pub Date: July 16, 2019

ISBN: 978-0-451-49112-1

Page Count: 304

Publisher: Berkley Prime Crime

Review Posted Online: April 27, 2019

Kirkus Reviews Issue: May 15, 2019

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ANGELS BURNING

Filled with surprising twists and turns, this whodunit in a sullen town is a page-turner.

A young woman’s body is found smoldering in the fire pits of Campbell’s Run, Pennsylvania, and small-town police chief Dove Carnahan is on the case.

O’Dell (One of Us, 2014, etc.) returns with a captivating mystery. Who hated Camio Truly enough to not only bash her head in with a blunt object, but also ditch her body in a fiery grave? As Dove investigates, she’s assisted by Nolan, a gruff detective with the State Criminal Investigations Division and her sometime lover. Practically nobody lives in Campbell’s Run anymore, not since a sinkhole (which had been lurking underground after a mine fire) opened, sucking most of the town into its depths. Since then, Campbell’s Run has declined, as people with the means moved away to nearby Buchanan, so whoever dumped Camio’s body there must be a local. Even before Camio’s murder, the Truly family had had more than its share of troubles, including incarcerated sons and deaths by mayhem, but Dove is shocked at the apathy shown by Camio’s mother, the obese, television-addicted Shawna. Camio’s sister, Jessyca, a single mother, shows far more concern, although she makes little effort to hide her dislike of her younger, more ambitious sister. Yet under the thumb of matriarch Miranda Truly, Camio’s family clams up. Solving the case is further complicated now that Lucky Dombosky has been released from jail after serving 35 years for murdering Dove’s mother. Lucky claims Dove and her sister, Neely, framed him. Meanwhile Dove’s brother, Champ, has shown up, after his own long absence, with a precocious son in tow. O’Dell spins a fine tale, ratcheting up tension with every turn of the screw in Dove’s life and every downward spiral in the Truly family history.

Filled with surprising twists and turns, this whodunit in a sullen town is a page-turner.

Pub Date: Jan. 12, 2016

ISBN: 978-1-4767-5595-3

Page Count: 288

Publisher: Gallery Books/Simon & Schuster

Review Posted Online: Oct. 7, 2015

Kirkus Reviews Issue: Oct. 15, 2015

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