Good Reads - Fiction
Mystery
Regional Mysteries
M/BARR
Barr, Nevada - Endangered
Species - 1997,
306p.
Cumberland Island National Seashore, off the coast of
Georgia, is the evocative setting for the fifth mystery
featuring park ranger Anna Pigeon. Barr's descriptive
writing brings the island's ecology to life—palmetto
trees, ocean grasses, high heat and humidity, alligators,
and endangered loggerhead turtles. When a drug interdiction
plane crashes on the island due to sabotage, and the pilot
and passenger are killed, Anna sets out to investigate
her colleagues and the island's close-knit community.
M/BURKE
Burke, James Lee - In
the Electric Mist with Confederate Dead - 1993, 344p.
When Dave Robichaux arrests Elrod T. Sykes
for driving while intoxicated, he is offered information
about an old
murder in exchange for leniency in the DWI offense. Sykes,
who is appearing in a film being made in the New Iberia,
Louisiana area, keeps referring to the Confederate officers
he has seen in the area at night. Dave's own encounter
with a Confederate cavalry officer leads to the truths
that are as appropriate now as they were in the 1860's
South. FBI agent Rosie Gomes joins with Robichaux in solving
the serial rape-murders of young prostitutes in the area
in this complex novel. Burke is excellent at conveying
mood and sense of place.
M/COLLINS
Collins, Max Allan - The
Million-Dollar Wound - 1986, 335p.
Combat
veteran P.I. Nate Heller arrives in wartime Chicago and
collides with a homefront every bit as violent as the
jungle he left behind. The murder of a high-priced call
girl ignites the final violent days of mobster Frank Nitti's
reign. Heller also probes the tinsel underworld of Hollywood
where he encounters columnist Westbrook Pegler, actor Robert
Montgomery, fan dancer Sally Rand, and G-man Eliot Ness.
Almost every chapter begins with a photo or scene relating
to the chapter. The reader really is in 1940's Chicago.
M/DIBDIN
Dibdin, Michael - Ratking - 1989, 266p.
It's a mixed
blessing for police commissioner Aurelio Zen when he is called
away from his desk job exile in Rome
to investigate the kidnapping of industrialist Ruggiero
Miletti. In a society corrupted by blackmail, coercion,
and intertwining interests, Zen must tread carefully to
bring the truth to light. A tightly plotted literary thriller.
M/GUR
Gur, Batya - Murder
on a Kibbutz: A Communal Case - 1994,
350p.
Third mystery featuring Jerusalem investigator Michael
Ohayon by Israeli professor Batya Gur. The lifestyle of
the kibbutz, the most successful experiment in socialist
living in the modern world, is vividly rendered through
the eyes of an outsider. Aaron Meroz, Member of the Knesset,
has come a long way from the frightened child taken in
by the kibbutzim after his mother abandoned him. Now his
secret lover Osnat is found poisoned, and the eyes of the
commune all turn to Aaron. Old hurts, jealousies, and conflict
over technology and money suggest several candidates for
Osnat's murder. Ohayon must discover the murderer
while attempting to keep events quiet, and puts himself
and his staff at risk in doing so. A thoughtful mystery
that concentrates on human relationships.
M/LEON
Leon, Donna - Death
at La Fenice - 1992,
263p.
During the intermission of La Traviata at the Teatro
La Fenice in Venice, world-renowned conductor Helmut
Wellauer
is found dead, surrounded by the unmistakable odor of bitter
almonds. Commissario Guido Brunetti is charged with finding
the culprit "immediately" by his superiors
and an outraged press. His suspects include a young widow
and a soprano with a secret, with clues trailing back to
World War II. As he traverses the canals and foggy streets
of Venice, the reader will meet an irresistible sleuth
and a memorable setting. Followed by: Death in a Strange
Country, Dressed for Death, Death and Judgment.
M/McCLENDON
McClendon, Lise - The
Bluejay Shaman - 1994,
235p.
Art gallery owner Alix Thorssen is on call as an expert
for the FBI and other law enforcement agencies. She leads
a fairly uncomplicated life until her brother-in-law, Professor
Wade Fraser, is arrested for murder on the Salish reservation
in Montana. Fraser was known as having little patience
with people who exploited the Native Americans. What's
more, he was also heard arguing with Shiloh Merkin, the
woman found dead. As Alix begins looking into the events
surrounding the death of Shiloh, she uncovers more than
she bargained for, including a legendary artifact that
just may be worth killing for. Rich in color and detail,
the novel brings the landscape and character of Montana
to life while introducing a tough, yet sensitive, female
hero with a sense of humor. The treatment of the religion
and customs of the Western Montana Native Americans is
reminiscent of Tony Hillerman.
M/McCRUMB
McCrumb, Sharyn - The
Rosewood Casket - 1996,
305p.
As Randall Stargill lies dying on the family's farm
in Appalachia, his four sons come home to pay their respects
and, after his death, to carry out his last wish: to build,
together, a casket from the rosewood he had stored in the
attic. However, it is not only rosewood that has been hidden
away. Secrets from Randall's life, as well as those
of his sons, come to light in this moving and elegantly-written
mystery, part of McCrumb's "Ballad" series,
a mystical evocation of time and place.
M/McQUILLAN
McQuillan, Karin - Deadly
Safari - 1990,
293p.
Jazz Jasper's fledging safari company is in jeopardy
after the apparent heart attack of an obnoxious client,
followed by the murder of Jazz's good friend Lynn,
who commissioned the trip. Jazz investigates when Kenyan
Inspector Omondi is told to drop the case. Set against
the expansive savanna of Kenya, with numerous details of
African wildlife and safari life, Jazz comes to terms with
her personal and professional lives while uncovering a
murderer.
M/ROBERTS
Roberts, Gillian - The
Mummers' Curse - 1996, 231p.
Challenged
to disprove the adage that "those who
can, do; those who can't, teach," Amanda Pepper
determines to "commit journalism." Her research
into the famous Philadelphia Mummers' Parade becomes
very pertinent when, in the middle of the parade, one of
the reveling clowns falls dead of a gunshot. When a prime
suspect, a fellow Philly Prep teacher, names her as his
alibi, Amanda must investigate. With immense humor, Amanda
explores the Mummers, Philadelphia's "neighborhoods," family
honor, and of course, whodunit.
M/ROSENBERG
Rosenberg, Robert - House
of Guilt - 1996,
288p.
Retired from the Jerusalem Police Force, Avram Cohen
is asked by the minister of police to look for Simon
Levi-Tsur,
the psychologically disturbed heir to the House of Levi-Tsur,
an international Jewish banking house. Cohen soon finds
himself going from Tel Aviv's decadent nightlife
to the extremist religious Jewish settlements on the West
Bank. When Simon's body is found in the Judean desert,
his murder is attributed to Arab terrorists. Cohen finds
that the circumstances surrounding the boy's death
are suspicious and don't add up to a terrorist murder.
As he delves into Simon's last days, Cohen finds
that Simon was looking into an old robbery of ancient Israeli
antiquities. Cohen uncovers extremist plots, old robberies,
and a shocking crime with international implications.
F/SCOTTOLINE
Scottoline, Lisa - Legal
Tender - 1996,
291p.
Philadelphia law firm Rosato & Biscardi has suffered
a tragic loss. Biscardi is found dead at his desk, and
Rosato is the chief suspect. Unconventional lawyer Benedetta "Bennie" Rosato
is on the run from the police, who don't like her
much anyway, since her specialty is police misconduct and
excessive force cases, and she usually wins. Scottoline
has written several mysteries set in Philadelphia, all
with a different female lawyer protagonist. All are well-written,
fast-paced, and feature the City of Brotherly Love as a "main
character."
M/SKINNER
Skinner, Robert - Skin
Deep, Blood Red - 1997,
247p.
Displaying mastery for vivid imagery and incredible
detail, Robert Skinner leads us back to the jazz-filled,
money-hungry,
corrupt life in the Quarter of 1936 New Orleans. A Creole
nightclub owner passing as a white man, Wesley Farrell
is blackmailed by mob boss Emile Ganns into finding out
who killed the corrupt cop who allowed Ganns to operate.
While dodging bullets (in some intense shoot-'em-up
scenes) and closing in on the killer, a haunting secret
is revealed.
M/SMITH
Smith, Julie - New
Orleans Mourning - 1990,
376p.
Masked balls, parades, jazz bands...it's Mardi Gras
in New Orleans. Amidst this colorful setting, policewoman
Skip Langdon tracks the killer of Chauncey St. Amant, murdered
while riding in the parade. Growing up with the New Orleans
elite, Skip knows the suspects—Marcelle the pampered
daughter, Bitty the pill-popping wife, Henry the neglected
son, and Tolliver the doting family friend. The investigation
introduces her to Steve Steinman who shares her adventures,
her spirit, and her heart. The first of a series, this
book oozes with the atmosphere of the old South.
M/STABENOW
Stabenow, Dana - A
Cold Day for Murder - 1992,
199p.
Kate Shugak lives in an isolated cabin in the middle
of an Alaskan National Park. She has moved here to return
to her roots and to escape her experiences with the Anchorage
District Attorney's office. But she can't leave
behind her talent for detection—nor trouble. She
investigates the disappearances of a National Park Ranger
and the investigator who comes to look for him. Kate receives
help from her friend Bobby, a wheelchair bound Vietnam
veteran, and from sometime lover Jack Morgan from the DA's
office. As Kate delves into the disappearances, she realizes
the two men were murdered and that the murderer may be
someone very close to her. Stabenow's books paint
a vivid picture of the Alaskan wilderness and the subsistence
living conditions of the Native Americans who inhabit it.
Prepared by members of the Adult Reading Round Table,
a group of librarians from various library systems in Illinois. |