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Sunshine and Shadow
 
 

Sunshine and Shadow [Mass Market Paperback]

Earlene Fowler
4.7 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (15 customer reviews)
Price: CDN$ 9.99 & eligible for FREE Super Saver Shipping on orders over CDN$ 25. Details
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Product Description

From Publishers Weekly

Agatha Award winner Fowler offers two parallel plots to dramatize the alternating light-and-dark theme of her 10th beguiling mystery to feature Benni Harper, the San Celina, Calif., amateur sleuth and folk art museum curator. The first is set in 1978, when she's married to rancher Jack Harper; the second in 1995, when she's married to police chief Gabe Ortiz, whom she almost lost to Gabe's old lover Del Hernandez in her previous outing, Steps to the Altar (2002). In the "present" of 1995, when mystery writer and one-time San Selina resident Emma Baldwin loans a crazy quilt for display at the folk art museum, Benni is excited, though the quilt brings back mixed feelings about Jack. Then, shortly after arriving in town on a hush-hush case, PI Luke Webster, a former LAPD pal of Gabe's, gets stabbed to death. Frightening attacks on Benni's truck, creepy phone calls and hate mail follow. Benni must draw on all her crime-solving skills to find the pattern in the clues presented in this ingenious mystery. The overabundance of incidental detail may put off some, but most readers will relish the author's appealing picture of ranch life and small-town affairs, of barbecues and fiestas, of jocular locals and warm family and friends.
Copyright 2003 Reed Business Information, Inc. --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

From Booklist

The Benni Harper mysteries all have quilt patterns for their titles, and quilts figure prominently. Benni's latest opens with her grandmother Dove's marriage in the San Celina, California, church where Benni's own first marriage took place. The tale slips between the present (1995 here) and 1978, when Benni was a young married college student writing a paper on her favorite author, a local writer of Nancy Drew-type stories for girls. There's loss aplenty in Benni's circle, where everyone seems to have lost a spouse or a child, but there's tenderness, too, and an honest religious faith that pervades but does not smother the dailiness of life. Benni's new second husband is the Latino police chief. An old friend of his comes to town and is killed; Benni's author also returns to San Celina and is threatened; someone is stalking Benni herself. The many plotlines converge in a warmhearted spiral that includes the difficulties of marriage, the complexities of a large multiethnic circle of overlapping friends and relations, and old, buried secrets. GraceAnne DeCandido
Copyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

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THE SERVICE PORCH SCREEN DOOR OPENED WITH A rusty screech. Read the first page
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Customer Reviews

15 Reviews
5 star:
 (13)
4 star:    (0)
3 star:
 (1)
2 star:
 (1)
1 star:    (0)
 
 
 
 
 
Average Customer Review
4.7 out of 5 stars (15 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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2.0 out of 5 stars Set in the 90s but clinging to the 50s, Jun 30 2004
By A Customer
This review is from: Sunshine And Shadow (Hardcover)
"Sunshine and Shadow" has some redeeming qualities--the plot is moderately satisfying and the writing is good--but I simply couldn't stand the heroine. The book should have come with a review: "If you wish you were a Stepford wife, you'll love 'Sunshine and Shadow.'"

Thirty-something Benni Harper is the perfect hausfrau: cooking, volunteering, promising her dirty dishes that she'll meet them later, and making jokes with her friends about how "all men are the same." She's also unremittingly--cloyingly--sweet, good, and patient. At one point she tackles this really obnoxious woman, and for just a moment I thought she had snapped from the pressure of trying to be perfect and had resorted to violence to make the woman shut up. I was somewhat disappointed that this wasn't the case.

In a 1970s flashback, when Benni complains to her first husband about how "things are changing too fast" and "why can't things just stay the same?" she's predicting her later life: living in the 90s but clinging to the 50s. Or perhaps the 1870s. It's difficult to know which decade she'd prefer.

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5.0 out of 5 stars Wonderful book, May 31 2004
By 
This review is from: Sunshine and Shadow (Mass Market Paperback)
I really enjoyed this book. I liked it much better than Steps to the Altar. The thing that makes this book so enjoyable to read is the author's ability to make the reader feel like they are part of all the character's lives - not just Benni and her husband. I espcecially liked finding out more about the character of Jack.
The only negative is that there are way too many typos in the text of the paperback version. Ms. Fowler's writing deserves a better presentation.
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5.0 out of 5 stars A Really Good Book, Oct 7 2003
By 
wysewomon "wysewomon" (Paonia, CO United States) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Sunshine And Shadow (Hardcover)
In _Sunshine and Shadow_ Earlene Fowler has done something very difficult: taken two interlocking stories set seventeen years apart and told them in a way that each illuminates both the other and the underlying theme of the novel, bringing the two together at the end for a touching conclusion. The skill with which she pulls this feat off alone makes me give this book high marks. That there are other things to like here is frosting on the cake.

As San Celina prepares for its annual Fiesta Days, both Benni and her husband, Gabe, renew acquaintances with friends from their pasts. When one is murdered and Benni finds herself victimized by a mysterious stalker, Benni and Gabe are forced to remember and confront things they'd rather forget.

_Sunshine and Shadow_ is less a mystery than an exploration of characters and relationships, and the ways events in the past influence the present, both for good and bad. The murder story is more of a device in service to this theme than an end in itself, but I didn't feel cheated. I actually found it refreshing that Ms. Fowler chose to go in a very different direction and treat her characters in very different ways, instead of limiting herself to the same old "Benni is a snoop but it works out okay in the end" story. We see a very different Benni here, one who is forced to face fear and questions of faith in order to find her real strength.

There are a couple of glitches -- noticably that the Internet and cell phones are more prevalent in the world of the book than they really were in 1995 -- but none that detract from the excellence of the storytelling. _Sunshine and Shadow_ is a strong and sensitive addition to the Benni Harper series, one that made me think about it long after the reading was done.

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