Thursday, February 1, 2024

Murder Crossed Her Mind


This 4th installment of Stephen Spotswood's "Pentecost and Parker" series held up equally well, in my opinion, to the first 3 (Fortune Favors the Dead, Murder Under Her Skin, and Secrets Typed in Blood.) Although you can read this as a stand-alone, it's highly recommended to read then in order to have a fuller picture of the characters and their relationships. 

Willowjean "Will" Parker falls for one of the oldest scams in the book--a woman yelling for help, with a partner waiting in hiding to attack any would-be rescuer and rob them. She loses her wallet, her gun, and her pride; she'll not tell Ms. Pentecost about her stupidity. Parker is determined to find the culprits herself and exact her own revenge. But her time is also taken up with a new case brought to them by a local defense attorney, Forest Whitsun, who often defends indigent clients. In this case though, he wants them to find an old friend who has gone missing. She's an elderly woman with a photographic memory who may have made enemies through her work with a powerful legal firm, or maybe from her work helping the FBI locate Nazis who had escaped to New York City after the war. Former secretary Vera Bodine has become a recluse and a hoarder, never leaving the house according to their client, but she wasn't there when he came for his biweekly visit to check on her. Unlike their other cases that have often remained unsolved for long periods of time, if this is a kidnapping, time is of the essence. Will's wise cracking attitude and Pentecost's often silent problem solving will evoke another New York detective duo, Nero Wolfe and Archie Goodwin. 

Booklist says "Will's first-person narrative is witty, gritty, and 'as smooth as Lauren Bacall between silk sheets.'"  and calls the book a "superb retro noir..."Although Publishers Weekly did not have a particularly favorable review, calling the book "overstuffed," they do credit the dialogue with keeping the reader engaged. Kirkus also praises the narration but finds the storylines to be unsatisfactorily resolved.

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