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MURDER IN THE MAP ROOM
 
 

MURDER IN THE MAP ROOM (Hardcover)

by Elliott Roosevelt (Author) "ON JANUARY 31, 1943, German Field Marshal Friedrich Paulus surrendered at Stalingrad ..." (more)
4.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (1 customer review)

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From Kirkus Reviews

Still another room in FDR's White House is profaned by an unseemly corpse, this one of inoffensive wholesale shoe salesman George Shen, who certainly had no business in the White Houseand who left no record, despite stiff wartime security, of ever having signed in. So alongside the relatively feeble mystery of whodunit (think Japanese spies, secret codes, little red pills with unintended side effects) lies the considerably more clever mystery of how-did-he-get-in. The role of the First Lady, the nominal heroine of a series that's outlived her author son's death (Murder at Midnight, 1997, etc.), is subordinated to those of Secret Service agent Robert Kirkwal and D.C. Chief of Detectives Captain Edward Kennelly, both of whom find themselves, for security reasons, abruptly named Commanders in the Naval Reserve. But the real star here is Soong Mei-ling, Madame Chiang Kai-Shek, on an official visit to importune the US to deflect more of its war effort from the European theater to the Japanese, who are harassing her husband, the corrupt Generalissimo who prattles of peace and freedom while hiding behind his scant divisions back in his petty fiefdom. The tangled, predictable plot, with its legions of sinister Orientals, springs to life every time Madame Chiang sweeps into the room. -- Copyright ©1998, Kirkus Associates, LP. All rights reserved.


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It is 1943, and a visit from Madame Chiang Kai-Shek throws the White House in a whirl. Eleanor Roosevelt acts the perfect hostess and companion - until the discovery of a dead Chinese shoe salesman in the map room. His throat has been slit ear-to-ear and there's a high level of opium in his blood.

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ON JANUARY 31, 1943, German Field Marshal Friedrich Paulus surrendered at Stalingrad. Read the first page
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4.0 out of 5 stars Suspenseful with diplomacy and war involved, Aug 6 1999
By Mary Cooper (LaGrange Park, Illinois USA) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
A Japanese spy is found murdered in the top-secret map room of the White House in 1943 during World War II while Madame Chiang Kai-Shek and her entourage are visiting the Roosevelts. First Lady Eleanor Roosevelt, along with the D.C. Chief of Detectives and a Secret Service Agent, solve the mystery. But Mrs. Roosevelt is shown going about her duties, for example, attending a celebrity auction and only assisting the professionals investigating the murder. Her son, author Elliott Roosevelt, realistically portrays his mother and father, FDR, and probably Madame Chiang Kai-Shek, too, who is a great character who dominates every scene she's in. Interestingly, the author mentions 19 year-old Margaret Truman who became a fellow mystery writer. The story was suspenseful especially with diplomacy involved and the urgency of the war going on. For someone who's been dead for nine years, Elliott Roosevelt writes a good mystery although Eleanor Roosevelt is always fascinating to read about.
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