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WHAT YOU DON'T SEE

A gripping relationship-based procedural that drags you in and spits you out wan but satisfied.

A routine stint as a bodyguard becomes a nightmare for a Chicago cop–turned–private eye and her ex-partner.

Vonda Allen’s magazine, Strive, is widely popular among black readers, but Vonda herself is a manipulative prima donna, so it’s no surprise she’s been getting threats. Cass Raines agrees to help her former partner and best friend, Ben Mickerson, guard Vonda, who’s been ignoring the threats and destroying all the expletive-filled letters, save one held back by Kaye Chandler, her worried assistant, who slipped it to Ben. Meanwhile, the murder of a cop brings back bad memories for Cass, who quit the force after she was shot while paired with the same ambitious cop who’s now gotten his new partner killed. In addition to putting up with Vonda’s snotty attitude, Cass must deal with the reappearance of the father who deserted her as a child. Soon after one of Vonda’s employees is killed, Ben is knifed at a book signing, forcing Cass to dig deep into Vonda’s past. As Ben clings to life and Vonda refuses to give the cops the slightest assistance, Cass forges a tenuous alliance with one of the detectives on the case as she hunts for clues. Both Vonda and Kaye are hiding behind bogus histories, and they’ll go a long way to hide a string of dead bodies in their pasts.

A gripping relationship-based procedural that drags you in and spits you out wan but satisfied.

Pub Date: May 26, 2020

ISBN: 978-1-4967-1493-0

Page Count: 304

Publisher: Kensington

Review Posted Online: March 14, 2020

Kirkus Reviews Issue: April 1, 2020

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BURIED IN A GOOD BOOK

Whimsy meets woodsy.

A mystery writer finds solace and murder in rural Oregon.

Mystery writer Tess Harrow is worried about her daughter, Gertrude. The usually resilient 14-year-old is stung by her father’s utter silence since his divorce from Tess. Fortunately, Tess has just the answer: She’ll take the feisty teen to an isolated cabin in the woods, far from Seattle coffee shops, the internet, or running water. Gertie’s reaction is predictable, but nothing else is. Shortly after their arrival, they hear a sudden boom, and water, fish, and body parts rain down from the sky. When he finally answers their distress call, Sheriff Victor Boyd tells them it’s probably “the Peabody boys.” Sure enough, Adam and Zach have been blast fishing with dynamite again, only this time, somebody stashed a corpse in the lake before their first kaboom. Boyd’s deputy Carl, who’s detailed to keep watch on Tess’ cabin, disappears, but Ivy, his female counterpart, is unfazed. What she wants most of all is for Tess to read the 1,000-page science-fiction adventure she’s written and shop it to her agent. In the meantime, Tess is fascinated with Boyd, a dead ringer for her own franchise hero, Detective Gonzales. If she can only tag along after Boyd while he’s trying to crack the case, she figures that her next novel, Fury in the Forest, will practically write itself. Boyd wants Tess dogging him about as much as he wants eczema, but eventually the two make their peace with the help of hipster librarian Nicki Nickerson, the third Peabody triplet, a man in a Bigfoot costume, and a roving flock of toucans.

Whimsy meets woodsy.

Pub Date: May 24, 2022

ISBN: 978-1-72824-860-8

Page Count: 336

Publisher: Poisoned Pen

Review Posted Online: March 29, 2022

Kirkus Reviews Issue: April 15, 2022

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A MURDER MOST FRENCH

Neither the characters nor the mystery makes nearly as much of an impression as the setting and the cuisine.

More accurately, Four Murders Most French, since none of the homicides entangling Julia Child’s circle in postwar Paris seems any more Gallic than the others.

Joining Julia at a tasting during a monthly meeting of her wine club at L’École du Cordon Bleu, her neighbor, friend, and amanuensis Tabitha Knight is on hand to watch Chef Richard Beauchêne taste his very last wine, an 1893 Volnay Clos de la Rougeotte that he samples just before keeling over. Cyanide, thinks Tabitha, whose determination to stay away from anymore murders is on a collision course with her sense that she’s channeling Agatha Christie. Although Inspecteur Étienne Merveille wholeheartedly endorses her reluctance to get involved, she’s left with little choice after she recognizes Louis Loyer at another event as the chef who was arguing with Beauchêne on the evening of his last libation only moments before Loyer uncorks an 1871 Sauternes that turns out to be his last round as well. Assuming that the two poisonings (more will follow) can’t be a coincidence, Tabitha wonders if it’s a coincidence that she’s been on the scene for both of them and begins to make a cautious list of other people who were present for both deaths. Considering that she’s not much more interested in the suspects than her author, Tabitha does a highly effective job of identifying the culprit and tipping her hand in a way that forces her once again to employ her Swiss Army knife to rescue herself from certain death.

Neither the characters nor the mystery makes nearly as much of an impression as the setting and the cuisine.

Pub Date: April 23, 2024

ISBN: 9781496739629

Page Count: 304

Publisher: Kensington

Review Posted Online: Jan. 20, 2024

Kirkus Reviews Issue: Feb. 15, 2024

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