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Anyone who cut some of their genre eyeteeth on the excellent books about the fishing, hunting, and crime-solving (in that order of preference) Boston lawyer Brady Coyne will be delighted to hear that William G. Tapply has brought him back for another mystery that combines expert entertainment with some serious social issues. Sharing a house in Maine with his "virtual spouse," writer Alexandria Shaw, Coyne gives a tough, independent African American woman named Charlotte Gillespie a lift and an offer of help finding the person who poisoned her dog. When Charlotte disappears and red swastikas are painted on her house and on Coyne's car, he--and we--know that something nasty is going on. The complicated plot involves a connection to the KKK and a bunch of deer-hunting, conniving computer scientists, and along the way Coyne gets to fish in several heartbreakingly beautiful locations. Other Coyne books include the equally satisfying
Close to the Bone.
--Dick Adler
Brady Coyne is a Boston lawyer with a noisy disposition. In this latest mystery, Brady finds himself in western Maine investigating swastikas and a dead dog and a missing woman. Though this is good fun, reader John Michalski is no Mainer. His Maine accent, which he insists on giving nearly everyone in the book, is painfully flawed. He didn't do his homework either when it comes to place names; they are butchered. A real example of the wrong reader ruining a book. B.H.B. © AudioFile 2000, Portland, Maine--
Copyright © AudioFile, Portland, Maine
--Ce texte provient d'une édition qui n'est plus publiée ou qui est non diponible.