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Sharon Short

Autor de Death of a Domestic Diva

15 Obras 506 Miembros 26 Reseñas 1 Preferidas

Sobre El Autor

Series

Obras de Sharon Short

Death of a Domestic Diva (2003) 87 copias
Death by Deep Dish Pie (2004) 71 copias
Hung Out to Die (2006) 50 copias
Death in the Cards (2005) 48 copias
Tie Dyed and Dead (2008) 40 copias
Murder Unfolds (2007) 39 copias
Angel's Bidding (1994) 39 copias
The Death We Share (1995) 24 copias
Past Pretense (1994) 19 copias
Sanity Check (2012) 4 copias
Downriver (2011) 1 copia

Etiquetado

Conocimiento común

Miembros

Reseñas

Patricia Delaney is a detective, one who does most of her investigating on the internet. What I find especially fun about this book is that it and its companions were written in the 1990s, when the internet was new, and either exciting, or a reason to laugh at Al Gore--and Sharon Short knew what the internet really could and couldn't do. You could find a lot on the internet. Some of what you could find on the internet was where to go look at the print or microfiche records that weren't on the internet. In 1995, Yahoo! was in its infancy, just a year old, and Google wasn't register as a domain name until 1997. Internet research required skills. Patricia Delaney has those skills.

When retired opera singer Carlotta Moses becomes the target of a sleazy tabloid tv show, Patricia Delaney is the person to find out who in the singer's past wants to trash her reputation.

Someone is claiming Carlotta Moses had a son, and gave him up when he was four years old. Carlotta says she was unable to have children because of a medical condition. She also has an adopted son, a husband who is devoted to her, a granddaughter. Patricia investigates the tabloid show host, and, of course, Carlotta. Who knew Carlotta at the time she would have had this son, and can either confirm she wasn't pregnant, or would have a reason to try to harm her now?

Meanwhile, just when she needs to concentrate on this case, Patricia's father turns up on her doorstep. He's a violinist who never made a go of it professionally, and made his career elsewhere. He's got a huge crush on Carlotta Moses. He'd like to protect his daughter, to a degree that isn't possible for an adult, much less one making her living as a detective. And he has shown up so suddenly because he has suddenly left her mother, Margaret, with whom his relationship, in the eyes of their children, has always seemed perfect.

Patricia is juggling family problems and a major, complicated case simultaneously. Carlotta proves to be a difficult client, with some unexpectedly nasty secrets in her past. The tabloid show host is also not a nice guy, and he has nastier friends.

It's good, well-developed story that "plays fair" in that all the clues are there, if you pay attention, but with enough complications that you may not put them together before Patricia does. It's tightly plotted, and the characters are interesting. The world around Patricia is developed with enough texture and depth that I never had moments of, for instance, wondering where the cell phones were. This was, as with the web, just before cell phones were going to be everywhere, and smartphones were not yet a gleam in their developers' eyes.

A really good mystery, with really good characters. Recommended.

I received a free copy of this audiobook from the narrator, and am reviewing it voluntarily.
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Denunciada
LisCarey | otra reseña | Sep 8, 2019 |
Donna and Will Lane live with their alcoholic father in a small town in Ohio in the 1950's. Their mother is presumed dead from cancer. High school senior Donna has shown her maturity by taking it upon herself to help raise Will. Young Will is obsessed with the idea of Alaska and he has been eating cereal in order to collect ten boxtops that he can send in to claim his one square inch of Alaska. When he receives the deed to his land, he is determined to visit there some day. But Will becomes ill, and on the spur of the moment, Donna decides to take Will and a Siberian husky named Trusty that Will has friended to visit his one square inch of Alaska. They set off in an old convertible using an old road atlas as a guide on a road trip to the Alaskan Territory.

Even though this trip to the Alaskan territory doesn't take place until late in the book, the one square inch of Alaska represents much more than the land itself. It means having goals and a dream to achieve. And it means believing in something enough to make it happen against all odds.

The book is a story of brother and sister love and of courage and determination in spite of many difficulties. It is a quick read that will take you on an emotional roller coaster ride. And even though it is considered an adult book, I believe it would be a suitable young adult read.
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Denunciada
Rdglady | 16 reseñas más. | Nov 20, 2018 |
Such a cute book with an incredibly sweet story.
 
Denunciada
Bethgarvinloflin1 | 16 reseñas más. | May 10, 2018 |
With shoe-horned sweetness and Americana, My One Square Inch of Alaska is hindered by unfocused plotting.
 
Denunciada
Birdo82 | 16 reseñas más. | Jan 15, 2017 |

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Estadísticas

Obras
15
Miembros
506
Popularidad
#48,975
Valoración
½ 3.3
Reseñas
26
ISBNs
29
Idiomas
1
Favorito
1

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