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Death on the Move
 
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Death on the Move [Mass Market Paperback]

Bill Crider


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Product Details

  • Mass Market Paperback
  • Publisher: Ivy Books; Reprint edition (July 29 1990)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0804104255
  • ISBN-13: 978-0804104258
  • Product Dimensions: 17 x 10.7 x 0.8 cm
  • Shipping Weight: 91 g

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Amazon.com: 4.5 out of 5 stars (2 customer reviews)

1 of 1 people found the following review helpful
4.0 out of 5 stars Reviewing: Death On The Move by Bill Crider, Sep 23 2008
By Kevin Tipple - Published on Amazon.com
This review is from: Death on the Move (Mass Market Paperback)
Clyde Ballinger is upset and that is not at all normal. Even when the limbs were found and had to be dealt with awhile back, Ballinger was pretty calm about the deal. Maybe because he reads a lot and what has happened in Blacklin County, Texas often reminds him of something he has read before in a crime novel. The quiet funeral director normally spends his time on Sunday mornings hitting the area garage sales looking for old paperback books. Ballinger loves crime novels and is a huge fan of the 87th precinct series. Usually, before Sheriff Rhodes has done much work on a real case, Ballinger has a fictional case to reference it to, a working theory and a suggestion or two on how the fictional detectives would solve the case. This time though, the crime has hit his business and he is very rattled.

Beyond rattled are Jack and Elva Storm. They are very upset and justifiably so. Jack and Elva Storm came to Ballinger's funeral home to see the body of Jack's sister, Jane Storm, before she was to be buried later in the day. Jewelry, specifically a gold ring with diamond solitaire is missing as are a pair of gold earrings with diamonds and a necklace of pearls. Jane was to be buried with these items and it seems that someone has removed them from the body. The items are gone and the Storms are threatening to sue. Sheriff Rhodes is sure Ballinger didn't take the stuff. Clyde is convinced that his partner Tom Skelly didn't steal the stuff either. Clyde is upset, the Storms are very upset and Sheriff Rhodes knows that the only thing that can be done is to delay the burial in hopes the thief gets caught and the items are recovered.

While he is dealing with that, old lady McGee out at the Clearview Lake called in to report some odd activity. She wanted to report some prowlers. She lives in a back area of the lake that most folks don't know about and find it hard to get to. Seems she has been seen a moving van around back there on the roads and with hardly anyone living back in there on a daily basis she thinks that somebody is stealing stuff.

Blacklin County, Texas has thieves of all types in this fourth installment of the sheriff Rhodes series. These story lines as well as others continue forward in a series that reminds one heavily of J.W. Jackson in Philip R. Craig's Martha's Vineyard stories. The settings are totally different, but the same type of folks, style of story telling with characters that feel like family are present along with plenty of amusing moments.

Character development is at a nil since these characters were pretty much developed in the first book. Instead, nuance is provided by the slowly ongoing and building romance between Ivy and Rhodes. That, along with his dealing regarding the eccentricies of his staff not only provide moments of comic relief, but, they also serve to illustrate that Rhodes, while he does make a lot of mistakes as a lawman, is a man with a good heart and a determined attitude.

The result is another good story.

Kevin R. Tipple (copyright) 2008

5.0 out of 5 stars #4 in the Sheriff Dan Rhodes series, April 3 2007
By Corinne H. Smith - Published on Amazon.com
This review is from: Death on the Move (Hardcover)
Looks like theft is a big problem these days in Blacklin County, Texas. First, the local funeral director complains to Sheriff Dan Rhodes that someone is stealing family jewelry from his "clients" during viewing hours. Then an elderly widow spies a suspiscious moving van cruising at various times throughout the Clearview Lake area. And it's January, the off season. When Rhodes and his deputy Ruth Grady investigate, they discover that several vacation homes have been completely cleared out, without even a speck of dust left in sight. That's when a dead body wrapped mummy-like in duct tape falls out of a closet to the floor, right in front of them. Who was the victim? Why was her body left in that condition? Did it mean the thieves were also murderers, or was the murder a separate crime? The questions get even thicker when it turns out that the woman had been having an affair with a neighbor behind her husband's back. Both the husband and the lover were known to have argued with the victim around the time of her death. And then there's that moving van. When Rhodes tries to find it, he instead stumbles onto a pair of good-ol'-boy drug runners and a minor stash of pot. What in the world is going on in this peaceful plains community? And exactly how much has that lakeside widow seen?

While Rhodes keeps busy enough trying to decipher the clues and find the criminals responsible, he also has to plan for some upcoming changes in his personal life. He and Ivy Daniels have finally set a wedding date. (Ella Click won the courthouse pool, much to the chagrin of Rhodes' closest colleagues, Hack and Lawton.) Ivy, good sport that she is, has even agreed to help her fiance with one of the ongoing investigations by lying as still as can be, in a coffin. It must be love. Maybe Dan Rhodes won't have to live on bologna sandwiches and franks and beans much longer.

As usual, our favorite Texas sheriff manages to get into a few scrapes before catching the culprits for good. The flea market scene here is *not* to be missed. Author Bill Crider continues to provide good mystery characters, descriptions, and plots for our amusement. A very satisfying reading experience.
 Go to Amazon.com to see both reviews  4.5 out of 5 stars 

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