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Cargando... Homicide in Hardcoverpor Kate Carlisle
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Inscríbete en LibraryThing para averiguar si este libro te gustará. Actualmente no hay Conversaciones sobre este libro. The death of her mentor has Brooklyn searching for a murderer. ( ) Character List Brooklyn Wainwright serious, blond, tall, still barely out of my gangly stage Robin Tully, best friend, runs her own tour and travel business and is also a brilliant sculptor. curvy brunette with almond eyes Abraham Karastovsky, my lifelong teacher and mentor. Vinnie neighbor pretty young Indian woman, wood sculptors and animal activists, cats Pookie and Splinters. Suzie Stein neighbor Vinnie's girlfriend, wood sculptors and animal activists Derek Stone, Commander, private security Homicide inspector Nathan Jaglow, tall, probably in his fifties, with short, curly gray hair and a sad smile, was a very patient man. Inspector Janice Lee, was Asian American, pretty but painfully thin, with long, lustrous black hair. Minka LaBoeuf the woman could fuel my rage faster than anyone I’d ever known, X-Acto knife and stabbed me in the hand. Enrico Baldacchio an unpleasant little man with a tendency to sweat. And he’d been present at the Covington Ian McCullough (curator) been engaged several years ago for almost six months until I took pity on him and broke it off. Thankfully, we were still good friends Winslows, Conrad- Faust owner Sylvia wife, Meredith, daughter Anandalla - cocktail note, Abraham Karastovsky's daughter Gabriel -Man in Black - Discreet Procurement There is a subgenre of cozy mysteries series which picks up a hobby (usually art or craft) or business and sets the series around it - coffee-shops, baking, bookstores... you name it, it probably exists. Most of them are formulaic to some extent (there is a love interest, whoever runs the business/has the hobby becomes a reluctant detective, the police seems to always think they did at least the first murder at least for awhile and so on) but they tend to have enough details and difference to actually work on their own. This novel is the first in one of these series. Brooklyn Wainwright restores old books and is one of the best in the business, albeit very young. A rare collection, being restored by her old mentor Abraham Karastovsky, is about to be shown in a local museum but he does not live long enough to see it - during a celebration in the museum he is killed. And it seems like Brooklyn and people she cares about are in the frame for it. So she resolves to do two things: find the murderer and finish Abraham's work with the collection. There is an old love interest, there is an old foe (almost Cruella de Vil level cartoonish in her hate) and then there is the security consultant which makes Brooklyn's knees week. All that was the usual formula. Then there are the details - the commune where Brooklyn grew up (and met Abraham), all the book binding and restoring details and Brooklyn's personality which after a bit of a stumble early on (way too... formulaic) actually evens out and even shines. But what really carries the book is the mystery itself - the murder and its resolution. With old books all over the place it was bound to be ties to the past and it is. But it was handled properly, without sudden jumps or surprises. A good start for a new cozy mystery series - if you are in the mood for the style. I plan to read at least a few more from the series - they are a wonderful palate cleanser after heavier books. sin reseñas | añadir una reseña
Fiction.
Mystery.
HTML:Book expert Brooklyn Wainwright discovers that murder is always a bestseller in the first novel in the New York Times bestselling Bibliophile Mystery series. Brooklyn Wainwright is a skilled surgeon. Sure, her patients might smell like mold and have spines made of leather, but no ailing book is going to die on her watch. The same can??t be said of Abraham Karastovsky, Brooklyn??s friend and former employer. On the eve of a celebration for his latest book restoration, Brooklyn finds her mentor lying in a pool of his own blood. With his final breath Abraham leaves Brooklyn with a cryptic message, ??Remember the Devil,? and gives her a priceless??and supposedly cursed??copy of Goethe??s Faust for safe-keeping. Brooklyn suddenly finds herself accused of murder and theft, thanks to Derek Stone, the humorless??and annoyingly attractive??British security officer who found her kneeling over the body. Now she has to read the clues left behind by her mentor if she is No se han encontrado descripciones de biblioteca. |
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Google Books — Cargando... GénerosSistema Decimal Melvil (DDC)813.6Literature English (North America) American fiction 21st CenturyClasificación de la Biblioteca del CongresoValoraciónPromedio:
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