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Fadeaway Girl (2011)

por Martha Grimes

Series: Emma Graham (4)

MiembrosReseñasPopularidadValoración promediaMenciones
25814103,234 (3.44)3
Emma Graham continues her investigation into the disappearance of the Slade baby from the Belle Ruin Hotel more than 20 years before. The sudden appearance in town of the baby's father makes her even more determined to learn the truth.
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Mostrando 1-5 de 14 (siguiente | mostrar todos)
This books works because of colourfulness of the main character and the quirkiness of residents of rural Maryland. ( )
  charlie68 | May 29, 2021 |
Being a fan of Martha Grimes and the description of the plot drew me to this book. Also the cover artwork was intriguing. It is an example of a Fadeaway Girl.

Twelve year old Emma Graham is the youngest reporter (cub) on the “Conservative” – the local paper, waitress at the Hotel Paradise and personal bartender for her Great-Aunt Aurora Paradise. Emma is also researching the “kidnapping” of a four-month-old baby from the Belle Ruin Hotel, the murders of Mary-Evelyn Devereau, Rose Queen and Fern Queen for her current writing series. These events happened about 20 years ago, so she spends her free time in the backroom of the “Conservative,” among the old newspapers and magazines, also questioning citizens around the area, trying to piece together what exactly happened and why. She is especially interested in what happened to the kidnapped baby and if there even was a baby.

The characters in and around Spirit Lake, La Porte and Lake Noir are brought to life by Grime’s writing. Small town life, far from any big city, a few quirky characters and a mystery make for a good mix. Emma is inquisitive, not beyond high jinks and determined to get answers to her questions. Little by little, she pieces things together.

This is one of a short series, so I think I’ll probably pick up the other to round out the whole picture. Besides, I like Grime’s writing. ( )
  ChazziFrazz | Feb 28, 2021 |
Gave it 5 stars because I think I've been a bit mean with the stars lately - and I just loved this book. It seems to catch such a deep feeling for life though a focus on quite surface things. I would have loved to spin the book out for weeks, but it was just not possible to stop reading for more than a few hours at a time. This is the fourth book set in Paradise Hotel and only a week covered in each book - should have felt hectic but instead sets a wonderful leisurely pace. ( )
  Ma_Washigeri | Jan 23, 2021 |
This book is just the second half of Belle Ruin. The two should be combined. It's actually the fourth of the Emma Graham stories, but Hotel Paradise and Cold Flat Junction stand on their own. The last two only stand together.

By some quirk, my spouse picked up Hotel Paradise some 15 or so years ago for vacation reading (she probably thought it was another Richard Jury mystery). I loved it. It is one of my favorite books ever. The heroine, Emma Graham is a spunky, creative 12-year old. I have this awesome niece who was about 12 when I read Hotel Paradise, so in part I expect my liking of the book had to do with my liking my awesome niece. Still it was a great story. When we discovered Cold Flat Junction at a church fair a few years ago, I was delighted to become reacquainted with Emma. The story was almost as compelling as Hotel Paradise.

These last two books don't match up. Martha Grimes has let things which were once charming or funny become overworked and annoying. Spiking the salad of a crabby old lady once or twice is fun, but when Emma does it with regularity, it becomes sociopathically cruel. Not good.

One of the charms of the first two books, and The End of the Pier, which is set in the same place and has some of the same characters, albeit not Emma, is that you can't be sure of the time or place. The locale is around a faded resort hotel which has seen better times. Perhaps its in the Adirondacks or Poconos, that's where these kinds of resorts used to flourish. It turns out, in this book that they're in Western Maryland, Garret County, no doubt. Wow, I never knew any one in Maryland who ever bothered going to Garret County for vacation (or any other reason). They went to Ocean City or Pennsylvania, or some such. Even the Boy Scouts didn't go to Garret County. I would think it even less likely to have New Yorkers vacation in Garret County. But, it's possible, I suppose, so that part only bothered me a tiny bit.

But we get a much better handle on the time period in this book, which takes away some of the book's enigmatic charm. Things pretty much have to be in the 1960s at a minimum because there are 50 states and because young, star struck girls from 20 years before the period in the book were enamored by Veronica Lake. Well, Veronica was pretty much done by the mid 1940s and definitely not a factor in anyone's reckoning by 1950. So, here we are in the 1960s, but the 12-year old in the story knows Ink Spots songs by heart, and her older brother's musical friend is all over tin-pan alley, Paper Moon, and so forth. No way 1960s teenagers weren't into Elvis, Frankie Avalon, Annette, The Drifters, et al (but the 90-something year old great aunt liked Patience and Prudence? WTF?). Anyway, when the time wasn't clear, the books were rather more fun. When the time becomes clarified, one realizes that all the cultural references are wrong. WTF? I was much happier when I couldn't decide if the time were the 1940s or 1950s, but when it became clear it had to be the 1960s, it just didn't gibe.

So, I think what I'm trying to say, is the first couple of books in this series are rather awesome, but Martha Graham has pretty much shot her wad by the time she got to these last two. Even so, Fadeaway Girl and Belle Ruin are still fun reads, albeit no longer awesome (unlike my niece who has long since left 12 behind, but who is, never-the-less, still awesome).
( )
  lgpiper | Jun 21, 2019 |
Emma 12 yr old sleuth — murders + mystery of kidnapped Baby — okay

Emma continues her investigation into the strange disappearance of the four- month-old Slade baby from the Belle Ruin Hotel more than twenty years before. The sudden appearance in town of the baby's father, Morris Slade, makes her even more determined to learn the truth. Then a mysterious drifter named Ralph Diggs appears at the Hotel Paradise, looking for work, ingratiating himself with everyone there. Everyone, that is, except Emma.
  christinejoseph | Sep 5, 2017 |
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To the memory of two of my favorite writers, Gary Devon and Stuart M. Kaminsky. So long, Lew.
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We were talking about the kidnapped baby.
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Emma Graham continues her investigation into the disappearance of the Slade baby from the Belle Ruin Hotel more than 20 years before. The sudden appearance in town of the baby's father makes her even more determined to learn the truth.

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