Shiver Hitch
Jane Bunker Mystery Series, Book 3
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- اطلاعات
- نقد و بررسی
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نقد و بررسی
April 17, 2017
In Greenlaw’s insipid third Jane Bunker mystery (after 2008’s Fisherman’s Bend), Jane’s boss at Marine Insurance Consultants Company tasks the 43-year-old claims investigator and assistant deputy sheriff with surveying fire damage done to a home on Maine’s Acadia Island. Jane finds the charred corpse of owner Midge Kohl among the building’s ruins, but assumes that the death and conflagration were accidental. What little evidence she collects, however, points to arson and Midge’s likely murder. Despite her shoddy detective skills (and the fact that Maine sheriffs’ departments don’t investigate homicides), the Hancock County sheriff places Jane in charge of the case, asserting that the former Miami cop has more experience in “such things” than “even the Maine State Police.” Nasty weather, tight-lipped locals, and spotty cell phone service complicate Jane’s efforts. Greenlaw—a fisherwoman and bestselling nonfiction author—writes evocatively about small-town life and harsh Maine winters, but her novel’s strong sense of place fails to compensate for its uneven tone, preposterous plotting, and two-dimensional characters.
April 1, 2017
A Miami cop finds life very different when she moves to Maine, from the weather to the stubbornly independent people of Green Haven.Jane Bunker, insurance investigator and part-time deputy sheriff, was born on Acadia Island, but her mother left with her and her brother, Wally, who has Down syndrome, when they were very young. She knows the Bunker family only from her mother's unflattering stories and so far has not worked up the courage to look into the past. When her boss asks her to investigate a house fire on Acadia, she gets her buddy Cal to take her across and goes to the home of the caretakers, Joan and Clark Proctor, and their daughter, Trudy, a mouthy law student who's been picketing the island lobster factory and, as Jane later learns, sending threatening emails to Midge Kohl. Acadia has been far from peaceful ever since Midge and her husband gathered a group of investors to build a factory to process lobster. Finding too few locals to staff the place, the Kohls imported a group of ex-cons, driving down property values and scaring off residents. Their house fire at first seems accidental, but when Jane stumbles upon the body of the unpopular Midge and the autopsy reveals that she was murdered, the sheriff hands her the case. On the mainland, she arrests two men carrying a box of powder she thinks is probably drugs. She's wrong--the substance is used to treat lobsters for transport--but the episode makes her wonder if drugs are involved in Midge's murder, and she jumps to a few more conclusions that work out no better as she doggedly pursues a killer who may have her marked for murder. Greenlaw's (Lifesaving Lessons, 2013, etc.) experience as a Maine-based lobster-boat captain brings verisimilitude to her descriptions of the people, the landscape, and most of all the wild offshore weather, all neatly rolled into a mystery with plenty of suspects.
COPYRIGHT(2017) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.
June 1, 2017
After leaving her job as a police detective in Florida, Jane Bunker is now an insurance investigator and assistant deputy sheriff in Maine. Her jobs collide when a house fire investigation turns into a case of arson and murder. Greenlaw's third atmospheric mystery (following Fisherman's Bend) combines the author's knowledge of the sea with humorous accounts of small-town life.--LH
Copyright 2017 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.
May 1, 2017
Greenlaw's Jane Bunker is an insurance investigator and part-time deputy sheriff in Green Haven, Maine. Her family is originally from nearby Acadia Island, but she knows little of her past. When she is asked to investigate a fire that has destroyed a home on the island, she thinks she might learn a bit about her history in the process. Then she finds a body in the house, and the case becomes murder. The dead woman, Midge Kohl, ran a lobster-processing plant and was universally disliked in the town. The author's experience as a lobster-boat captain is apparent in her vivid descriptions of nor'easters and in her portrayals of the quirky residents of Maine's rural areas. An entertaining series, strong on setting.(Reprinted with permission of Booklist, copyright 2017, American Library Association.)
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