
The Affliction
A Novel
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- نقد و بررسی
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نقد و بررسی

January 15, 2018
Prospects look bleak for once-proud Rye Manor School for Girls in Rye-on-Hudson, N.Y.—and that’s even before a teacher’s body is discovered at the bottom of the pool—in Gutcheon’s amiable if overly chatty sequel to 2016’s Death at Breakfast. Fortunately for fledgling head of school Christina Liggett, retired New York City educator Maggie Detweiler, one of the members of the Independent School Association evaluation team on campus to determine the institution’s fate, dabbles in detection, and before you can say “Jessica Fletcher,” she and her partner in crime solving, socialite Hope Babbin, are on the case. Leveraging their curiosity and extensive social networks, the enterprising pair swiftly discover more suspects than Range Rovers in the wealthy hamlet, including trustees with unsavory conflicts of interest and a staffer’s emotionally disturbed son, not to mention the victim’s overbearing and under-alibied spouse. Plotting, unfortunately, isn’t Gutcheon’s strong suit—with the exception of a surprising and elegant denouement. Still, fans of caviar cozies will find much to savor. Agent: Emma Sweeney, Emma Sweeney Agency.

The second in novelist Beth Gutcheon's cozy mystery series gives the two amateur detectives--a retired school headmistress and a socialite --the murder of a prep school teacher to solve--in company with the local cops, of course. And given the success of their previous murder investigation (DEATH AT BREAKFAST), the police are friendlier than might be expected. Narrator Hillary Huber's calm, somewhat stilted pace emphasizes the cozy in the mystery and misses some of the book's intended social comedy, but she nonetheless provides a pleasant narration of an atmospheric story replete with social climbers, business crooks, caring teachers, and teenagers of all sorts. Former prep schoolers will be particularly pleased. A.C.S. � AudioFile 2018, Portland, Maine

December 1, 2017
Humor and suspense in equal measure make for a delightful read in this second outing (following Death at Breakfast, 2016) for the well-heeled duo of Maggie Detweiler and Hope Babbin. Taking a break from her studies of Koine Greek at the New School, retired headmistress Maggie has undertaken the evaluation of a girls' boarding school on the Hudson River. Florence Meagher, a celebrated art-history teacher, has the Afflictionshe cannot stop talking. Really! The school and its cozy little town are rife with resentments and secrets, and when Florence's body is found in the campus swimming pool, Maggie needs Hope and her uncanny way of reading people to determine who killed Florence to shut her up. Hope has been yawning through Silas Marner for her discussion group and is happy for an out. These women have extraordinary, often unexpected, ways and means. They even score tickets to see Hamilton. Recommend this to readers who like their detectives feisty and mature, in the tradition of M. C. Beaton's Agatha Raisin and the Rosemary & Thyme TV series.(Reprinted with permission of Booklist, copyright 2017, American Library Association.)
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