Imagen del autor

Kate Gallison

Autor de Bury the Bishop

11+ Obras 226 Miembros 5 Reseñas

Sobre El Autor

Incluye el nombre: Irene Fleming

Créditos de la imagen: Kate Gallison, a.k.a. Irene Fleming. Photo courtesy of Princeton Public Library.

Series

Obras de Kate Gallison

Bury the Bishop (1995) 48 copias
Hasty Retreat (1997) 37 copias
Grave Misgivings (1998) 32 copias
The Devils Workshop (1996) 31 copias
Unholy Angels (1996) 29 copias
The Edge of Ruin (2010) 21 copias
The Brink of Fame (2011) 9 copias
Unbalanced Accounts (1986) 6 copias
The Jersey Monkey (1992) 6 copias
The Death Tape (1987) 5 copias
The Organizer (2004) 2 copias

Obras relacionadas

Etiquetado

Conocimiento común

Otros nombres
Fleming, Irene (pen name)
Fecha de nacimiento
1939
Género
female
Nacionalidad
USA
Lugares de residencia
Lambertville, New Jersey, USA
Educación
Thomas Edison College
Organizaciones
Authors Guild
Mystery Writers of America
Sisters in Crime

Miembros

Reseñas

1909 Mystery, detective afraid of heights but not much else, new silent movie making
 
Denunciada
siri51 | 2 reseñas más. | Jul 19, 2014 |
This is a very good first book in a series.

Mother Lavinia Grey is an relatively new Episcopalian Priest at a very small parish in a very small town in New Jersey. There are forces at work in the church politics that want to close her church and move her parishioners to a near-by town. While she is busy trying to save her church the Bishop is killed.

Lavinia soon comes under suspicion as the killer, partly because she found the body and partly because of her push to save her church.

There is an interesting cast of supporting characters such as a depressed woman, a socially awkward and sometimes depressed young man and a good looking cop.

I didn't figure out the mystery in this one, but really enjoyed the ride.

I'm coming late to this series so there are several books to read, and I'll be reading more of them as I find the time.
… (más)
 
Denunciada
bookswoman | Mar 31, 2013 |
First Line: When Emily Daggett Weiss boarded the Twentieth Century Limited in the spring of 1914, bound for a brief sojourn in the West, one or two old biddies gave her the hairy eye.

Women just don't travel without a chaperone in those days, so Emily gets more than two hairy eyeballs looking in her direction along the route. Her husband has been out in Flagstaff, Arizona, scouting for a location to shoot their next picture and trying to locate some camels to use in the movie. When Emily inquires at the hotel registration desk, she finds out in no short order that her husband has lost their movie company in a poker game-- and he's taken an actress down to Mexico where he can get a divorce and marry the new love of his life. For Emily, the earth has just shifted on its axis.

Left penniless and alone, the former chorus girl is looking for ways to gather up enough money to return East on the train when she meets Holbert Bruns, who's in Flagstaff investigating something for movie mogul Carl Laemmle. Bruns persuades Emily to head West on the train instead. The case he's on is proving difficult, and Bruns thinks Emily can get information that he can't. Once he explains this to Carl Laemmle, Laemmle will be sure to hire her-- and once the case is over, Emily can concentrate on becoming a director of moving pictures.

In California, everything works out as Bruns predicted. Emily is hired as an additional investigator, and Laemmle is very interested in having her direct one of his films-- as soon as she helps locate his missing leading man. Once actor Ross McHenry is found, Emily's career as a director can begin.

Emily is a very winning character, and in trying to overcome her abandonment and in her reactions to various people and places in Los Angeles, she's often quite funny. I enjoy this series-- not only for Emily-- but for all the information about the early days of the film industry. If I have any complaint about The Brink of Fame, it's that most of the secondary characters are two-dimensional and never quite come to life. However, the setting and the main character are strong enough for me to overlook that for the most part.

Do you need to read the first book in the series in order to make sense of this second book? No. There's enough information given where everything makes sense, and not so much that it will spoil the plot if you decide to read the first. Fleming has struck gold in this mystery series that takes place during the early days of the movie industry, and I'm looking forward to reading more of her adventures in Hollywood.
… (más)
½
 
Denunciada
cathyskye | Aug 16, 2011 |
It's 1909, and poor Emily Weiss makes the best of things when her husband, Adam, sells their home and possessions (except for his clothes) to become an independent movie producer. He signed a contract promising to deliver four one-reel films in three weeks' time. If they don't meet the deadline, they will lose everything they've risked. They're off to a good start when a man is murdered during the filming of a crowd scene, and Adam is arrested for the murder. Emily not only will have to finish the films on her own, but she must also prove her husband's innocence of the murder.

The mystery was pretty easy to figure out, and I had solved it well before the characters did. The fun was in its historical setting of the early days of the motion picture industry. As independent movie producers, the fictional couple went to great lengths to avoid Thomas Edison's men. I wasn't aware before reading this book how much control Edison exercised over the early days of film. He owned the patents for the technology used in film making, and he was zealous about enforcing them. I also wasn't aware that Fort Lee, New Jersey, where the Weisses filmed their movies, was the center for the motion picture industry before Hollywood.

Emily is a likeable heroine, but I can't say the same for her husband. He preferred to think of Emily as a helpless female, and his ego was wounded when she successfully carried on with the filming while he was in jail. However, when she was in a situation where she really was helpless, he seemed to think she ought to be able to take care of herself.

The second book in this series is due out in a few days, and I've already added it to my wish list.
… (más)
½
2 vota
Denunciada
cbl_tn | 2 reseñas más. | Aug 13, 2011 |

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Estadísticas

Obras
11
También por
2
Miembros
226
Popularidad
#99,470
Valoración
3.2
Reseñas
5
ISBNs
23

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