Most helpful customer reviews
5.0 out of 5 stars
A mystery crackling with high-voltage tension and suspense, Nov 1 1998
This review is from: Murder Take Two (Hardcover)
Murder Take Two, by Charlene Weir, is the fourth in a series of high-voltage mysteries. Weir is a master of tight, clean prose; characters the reader can care about; and intricate, twisty plots. Susan Wren, a former San Francisco police officer, becomes police chief of Hampstead, KS, when her new husband, the former chief, is murdered. Initially Susan wants the post because she is driven to catch his killer. Now, three years later, she wonders what is keeping her in this small town where she is still the outsider. Realizing that one part of the answer is something she would prefer not to admit even to herself--her attraction to second in command Ben Parkhurst--she tries unsuccessfully to stamp out her interest in him. In Murder Take Two, a Hollywood film crew is on location in Hampstead. When a stunt double is killed, Susan learns that the movie's leading lady, the lovely Laura, was once married to Parkhurst. Susan orders him off the case, but with Laura begging him to protect her, he can't stay away. As Susan struggles with her jealousy and Parkhurst's insubordination, an appealing young officer, Yancie, follows a string of bizarre episodes to the book's explosive ending. This series has everything going for it: fascinating characters, a sense of place so real you find yourself slapping mosquitoes, and ingenuous, complex plots. Don't miss it.
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5.0 out of 5 stars
otally enjoyable, Feb 17 1998
By A Customer
This review is from: Murder Take Two (Hardcover)
For police chief Susan Wren, trouble started the day Hollywood decided to go on location to shoot a film in her small Kansas town, making her tiny force stretched to the max. However, Trouble with a capital T does not start until stuntwoman Kay Bender, a ringer for superstar Laura Edwards, is killed during a shoot. During the initial inquiries, Susan learns that Laura has been the victim of several threatening notes. Susan also finds out that her current boy friend, police officer Ben Pankhurst, used to be Laura's spouse, disqualifying him from the case. As Susan digs deeper into the lives of the personalities involved, someone else is murdered. The police chief wonders if she can control her jealousy over Ben's former relationship and if Laura is the ultimate target of the killer. The fourth Susan Wren mystery is an intriguing who-done-it because it brings much insight into the personal lives of the recurring cast. Though the interspersing of the killer's thoughts into the action seems to cause some inertia, MURDER TAKE TWO remains a well-written, often times humorous novel. Wren fans will have plenty to crow about as they soar like an eagle with Charlene Weir's latest book. Harriet Klausner
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4 of 4 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars
A mystery crackling with high-voltage tension and suspense, Nov 1 1998
By Alex Matthews (MsAlexM@aol.com - Published on Amazon.com
This review is from: Murder Take Two (Hardcover)
Murder Take Two, by Charlene Weir, is the fourth in a series of high-voltage mysteries. Weir is a master of tight, clean prose; characters the reader can care about; and intricate, twisty plots. Susan Wren, a former San Francisco police officer, becomes police chief of Hampstead, KS, when her new husband, the former chief, is murdered. Initially Susan wants the post because she is driven to catch his killer. Now, three years later, she wonders what is keeping her in this small town where she is still the outsider. Realizing that one part of the answer is something she would prefer not to admit even to herself--her attraction to second in command Ben Parkhurst--she tries unsuccessfully to stamp out her interest in him. In Murder Take Two, a Hollywood film crew is on location in Hampstead. When a stunt double is killed, Susan learns that the movie's leading lady, the lovely Laura, was once married to Parkhurst. Susan orders him off the case, but with Laura begging him to protect her, he can't stay away. As Susan struggles with her jealousy and Parkhurst's insubordination, an appealing young officer, Yancie, follows a string of bizarre episodes to the book's explosive ending. This series has everything going for it: fascinating characters, a sense of place so real you find yourself slapping mosquitoes, and ingenuous, complex plots. Don't miss it.
1 of 1 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars
otally enjoyable, Feb 18 1998
By A Customer - Published on Amazon.com
This review is from: Murder Take Two (Hardcover)
For police chief Susan Wren, trouble started the day Hollywood decided to go on location to shoot a film in her small Kansas town, making her tiny force stretched to the max. However, Trouble with a capital T does not start until stuntwoman Kay Bender, a ringer for superstar Laura Edwards, is killed during a shoot. During the initial inquiries, Susan learns that Laura has been the victim of several threatening notes. Susan also finds out that her current boy friend, police officer Ben Pankhurst, used to be Laura's spouse, disqualifying him from the case. As Susan digs deeper into the lives of the personalities involved, someone else is murdered. The police chief wonders if she can control her jealousy over Ben's former relationship and if Laura is the ultimate target of the killer. The fourth Susan Wren mystery is an intriguing who-done-it because it brings much insight into the personal lives of the recurring cast. Though the interspersing of the killer's thoughts into the action seems to cause some inertia, MURDER TAKE TWO remains a well-written, often times humorous novel. Wren fans will have plenty to crow about as they soar like an eagle with Charlene Weir's latest book. Harriet Klausner
5.0 out of 5 stars
Begin reading this book early in the day when you have nothing else planned., July 20 2009
By M. C. Crammer - Published on Amazon.com
This review is from: Murder Take Two (Hardcover)
I am a fan of this series and found this book one of the more engaging. I did not want to stop reading and ended up reading it in one day, even though I had other things I was supposed to be doing. The plot involves a film being made in Hampstead, Kansas. Most of the story revolves around the members of the film crew and a local policeman who is providing on-site police presence. You need to suspend a fair amount of disbelief, but after all, this isn't a documentary about film-making (I suspect that a lot of this movie would have been filmed on a sound stage in Hollywood, not in a ruined mansion in the middle of Kansas). A stunt woman is killed fairly early on, but you don't know if she was the intended victim or the intended victim was the star she was doing the stunt for. Although Police Chief Susan Wren is the main detective character in the other books in this series, the focus in this book is away from her. Another police character, a handsome young man, provides the central police character, although Susan and other members of the Hampstead police department are given supporting roles. If I had any criticism, it's that I was fairly sure of the killer by about half-way through the book, but not really because of the clues -- more a process of eliminating other people. Besides, after you read a few hundred mysteries, as I have, you get to know how mystery authors think. I recommend this series for those who like cozies -- the author does a great job of creating a small town in Kansas, believably. One of her trademarks (besides excellent descriptions that use a few carefully chosen words to paint a vivid picture) is her use of weather -- severe cold, thunderstorms, tornados, etc. In this book, the weather is severe heat -- and you can almost feel it as the characters suffer through this Kansas heat wave. I only have one more to read in the series, so I hope the author writes more soon.
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