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Library | Call Number | Status |
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Searching... Amity Public Library | MYS MULLER Sharon McCone #22 | Searching... Unknown |
Searching... Monmouth Public Library | Fic (m) Muller, M. 2002 | Searching... Unknown |
Searching... Mount Angel Public Library | MULLER Sharon McCone #22 | Searching... Unknown |
Searching... Salem Main Library | MYSTERY Muller, M. | Searching... Unknown |
Searching... Stayton Public Library | M MULLER | Searching... Unknown |
Searching... Woodburn Public Library | Muller | Searching... Unknown |
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Summary
Summary
From the author of "Point Deception" comes a new Sharon McCone mystery set in San Francisco. McCone throws herself into work so she can get past her brother's suicide, but the wrongful-death suit she is working on hits too close to home.
Author Notes
Marcia Muller, novelist, short-story writer and anthologist, was born in Detroit in 1944. She attended the University of Michigan, where she studied writing.
Edwin of the Iron Shoes (1977) was her first book featuring Sharon McCone, a female private eye strong enough to compete in the male-dominated crime genre. In 1993, Muller was given the Private Eye Writers of America Life Achievement Award, and the following year her novel Wolf in the Shadows won the Anthony Boucher Award and was nominated for the Edgar Allen Poe Award for Best Crime Novel.
Muller is the co-author of the Carpenter and Quincannon Mystery series with Bill Pronzini.
(Bowker Author Biography)
Reviews (4)
Publisher's Weekly Review
Muller and her private eye Sharon McCone have come a long way since Edwin of the Iron Shoes (1977), which introduced McCone and inspired a generation of female mystery writers. Since then Muller's writing has become richer and her novels more complex, with many startling changes in the socially conscious San Francisco detective's life. This is Muller's best yet, with a case that parallels a personal tragedy McCone is trying to understand her brother Joey's recent suicide. Roger Nagasawa, scion of a wealthy Japanese-American family, has killed himself. Roger's heartbroken parents plan to sue his employer, a hip online magazine, for wrongful death because of rumored brutal working conditions. As usual in McCone mysteries, greed and corruption lie beneath the surface. First, Jody Houston, Roger's friend to whom he'd revealed illegal financial activities at the magazine, disappears. Then Max Engstrom, Roger's maniacal boss, tells Sharon that someone is sabotaging his business and one of his backers has vanished. More deaths ensue. After McCone retrieves Roger's computer files detailing his discoveries, she's almost killed. Muller deftly uses familiar devices electronic embezzlement and shady real estate deals in a convoluted but provocative plot. Her love of San Francisco is evident from her vivid descriptions of the city and its history. Although her villains are often obvious, she delves deeply into the human psyche for motivation. Readers will be thoroughly satisfied. (June 19) Forecast: That this Mystery Guild main selection marks the 25th anniversary of the series should attract extra media attention, especially in San Francisco and Los Angeles, where the author will be making personal appearances. (c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Kirkus Review
Feeling despondent over her brother Joey's suicide and guilty that she didn't know him well enough to thwart it, Sharon McCone, San Francisco's female Lew Archer wannabe, is reluctant to handle an investigation into another suicide. Roger Nagasawa worked for InSite, a trendy Internet magazine staffed by edgy workaholics, among them Dinah Vardon, the former girlfriend who ditched him. As the case evolves, McCone learns Roger was planning some sort of expose of InSite management. But where did he hide his notes? His neighbor Jody might know but won't tell. McCone's chum, reporter J.D. Smith, is on the right track to find them-until he's murdered in a house in Eagle Rock, Oregon, where a very scared Jody's been camping out. Assailed by even more grief and guilt, McCone rallies to search for Tessa Remington, the missing venture capitalist who had been bankrolling InSite until her disappearance dries up the funding, to the glee of Afton Development and one of InSite's executive directors. McCone will get a chance to stop another suicide before the villain offers her a share of the billions stashed in a suitcase to forget what she knows. Of course, she turns it all down, calls the cops, and hightails it out to her new house with her lover, Hy Ripinsky. Typical middling work from veteran Muller (Listen to the Silence, 2000, etc.): a tale that unfolds so rapidly that it's over before you can complain it's the mystery equivalent of fast food. Mystery Guild main selection
Booklist Review
Hard-edged and acerbic private eye Sharon McCone has been around for 25 years, since her debut in the highly successful Edwin of the Iron Shoes. Twenty-two mysteries later, McCone remains one of the most popular of hard-boiled female private eyes. Still, she can be sort of grating at times, and, to some ears at least, her tough-guy responses don't always ring quite true. You don't have to be a card-carrying McCone fan, however, to appreciate the tightness of plot and wealth of intriguing background in her latest adventure. Just after McCone's underachieving brother commits suicide at 45--a tragedy to which she reacts in typical, tight-lipped fashion--a criminal defense attorney friend asks McCone to investigate a death that is strongly suggestive of suicide. The Japanese American family of the victim, a young writer who fell to his death from the Bay Bridge, files a wrongful death suit claiming karoshi, death from overwork. As McCone investigates, she uncovers a brutal atmosphere of corporate hazing, infighting, and sabotage that may have led to suicide or murder. --Connie Fletcher
Library Journal Review
Muller's 22d Sharon McCone mystery packs plot, personality, and lots of life's messiness into the continuing saga of the San Francisco private investigator. After her brother's suicide, Sharon investigates the puzzling suicide of Roger Nagasawa, the middle of three sons in a wealthy family of Japanese descent. Basing his logic on a successful case in Japan, Roger's bereaved father wants Sharon to find evidence supporting a wrongful death suit against Roger's employer, InSite, a high-pressure dot-com with abusive personnel practices. After gathering information from the family, Roger's apartment, and Roger's friend Jody, Sharon gains undercover access to the InSite establishment itself with the help of her friend J.D. Smith. Webmaster Dinah Vardon, who years before jilted Roger, embodies ruthless, amoral ambition. Sharon shrewdly uncovers why certain people might deliberately undermine the company, as well as an embezzlement and fraud scheme that leads to J.D.'s murder. Subplots and Sharon's introspection add a counterbalance of maturity, intelligence, and emotion to the well-plotted story. Gay couple Ted and Neal, two of Sharon's employees, add humor and humanity. Highly recommended. Michelle Foyt, Russell Lib., Middletown, CT (c) Copyright 2010. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.