From Publishers Weekly
Peggy O'Neill is a campus cop with a wittily sarcastic voice and a talent for stumbling onto murder victims. The members of the Tower Writers' Collective are famous and semi-famous writers who conflict with one another over both literary and personal matters. When Cameron Harris is found propped up in a closet with a chapter of his latest manuscript--a roman a clef with digs in it about every literary figure in town--on his lap, the collective's members are prime suspects. Lake ( Poisoned Ivy ) uses the setting to make tongue-in-cheek and self-referential jokes about the literary scene. A wispy poetess ends one reading with a poem about the penis being an underdeveloped vagina, and at a dinner party another author suggests that a female campus police officer "would be an interesting subject for a novel, or at least a story." O'Neill's romantic involvement with one of the collective's members is an effective device, since it explains her presence at the scene of the crime and gives her access to the group, but Lake does not explore the relationship and ties it up too neatly when O'Neill's suitor decides to go live in South America. When he promises to write, the familiar phrase takes on a sinister cast.
Copyright 1992 Reed Business Information, Inc.
Copyright 1992 Reed Business Information, Inc.
Review
"A 'Must Read' For Fans Of Sue Grafton" -- -- Alfred Hitchcock Mystery Magazine
Book Description
The discovery of Cameron Harris's body has stunned the unversity. But some members of The Tower Writers' Collective are more than a bit relieved that the poison pen of the bestselling author has been silenced. Tamara Meade, the Tower's headstrong leader, has a history with the writer she'd just as soon keep secret. Poetess Melody Carr has plenty to hide--and a jealous husband as well. In fact, the suspect list reads like a Who's Who at the university, and campus cop Peggy O'Neill is making it her business to find out who is this elite crowd of authors and academics has resorted to censorship through murder.
About the Author
M. D. Lake lives in Minneapolis, Minnesota.