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Red, White, and Blue Murder: A Sheriff Dan Rhodes Mystery
 
 

Red, White, and Blue Murder: A Sheriff Dan Rhodes Mystery (Hardcover)

by Bill Crider (Author) "IF HE STOOD OUT IN HIS BACKYARD JUST AFTER SUNUP, SHERIFF DAN Rhodes could almost make himself believe that the whole day would be as..." (more)
5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (1 customer review)

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From Publishers Weekly

Fans of Sheriff Dan Rhodes or of just plain good storytelling will cheer Crider's 12th entry (after 2001's A Romantic Way to Die) in this dryly humorous series. This time around, the Texas lawman must face accusations of corruption from ambitious Clearview Herald reporter Jennifer Loam. Loam's source also fingers some of Blacklin County's commissioners, who may have been taking bribes. Rhodes easily clears himself, but takes a harder look at Loam's other allegations when her source, commissioner Grat Bilson, turns up murdered in the ashes of a burned-down house. Soon the suspects pop up like bluebonnets in the spring. There's commissioner and good ol' boy deluxe Jay Beaman and contractor Ralph Oliver, who supposedly bribed Beaman. Rhodes further learns that Bilson's wife, Yvonne, had been fooling around with Beaman while Bilson, in turn, had been seeing ex-con arsonist Linda Fenton on the sly. When Yvonne discovers her husband was two-timing her, she confronts Fenton with a loaded pistol at the fireworks stand where Fenton works. It's July 3, and the fireworks are just getting started. Crider's easy prose fits the setting to a tee and brings all the small town schemes, quirks and characters to true and amusing life. At the center of it all, Rhodes keeps his cool, making an excellent foil for both his long-suffering wife, Ivy, and the impetuous Loam.
Copyright 2003 Reed Business Information, Inc.


From Booklist

County commissioners in Texas wield extraordinary influence, controlling the purse strings for all roads and public works. Even in rural Blacklin County, that's serious money. Grat Bilson was a county commissioner, at least until someone whacked him over the head and set him on fire in his isolated hunting cabin. Blacklin County Sheriff Dan Rhodes knows that, where murder's concerned, it's either love or money. Bilson's roving wife has an alibi, which turns the focus to money, and sure enough, Rhodes quickly finds something rotten in the world of Blacklin's county commissioners. The latest Rhodes case makes it an even dozen in a very likable and polished series. Rhodes shambles through his investigations, often slightly bemused at the absurdity of human motivation, sometimes disgusted by its venality. He may have the heart of a country boy, but he also possesses an analytical mind that matches up with any sophisticated, big-city crime solver. Another winner from genre veteran Crider. Wes Lukowsky
Copyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved

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IF HE STOOD OUT IN HIS BACKYARD JUST AFTER SUNUP, SHERIFF DAN Rhodes could almost make himself believe that the whole day would be as cool and pleasant as that brief moment in the early morning. Read the first page
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5.0 out of 5 stars A rural Texas treat, Feb 5 2004
When young reporter Jennifer Loam approaches Sheriff Dan Rhodes with a scoop, he knows he'll have to investigate. Someone has been dishing dirt on a county commissioner--and on the sheriff himself. Rhodes knows that he didn't have county prisoners paint his house--and he's got the receipts to prove it, but does this mean that Loam's informant was wrong? Or is something else going on. Before he can track down the source, Rhodes is called to a fire--one with a body in the middle of it. And before you can ask whether it's hot enough, Rhodes has a murder on his hands.

Author Bill Crider does a great job depicting rural Texas--a place where a rib-eating contest is prime news, where petty corruption is par for the course, where a romance author is the top celebrity, and where a sheriff is part deity and part goat for the community. That sense of community, without excessive nostalgia, comes through clearly and represents a part of Texas that still exists.. Rhodes is a great and well developed character. I couldn't help but find myself wincing as he repeatedly got himself on the wrong side of fists, crockery, weapons, and even a fireworks display.

Crider writes with a deft and light touch. I got a good chuckle over both the situations he depicts and the dialogue his characters use to describe their feelings and intentions. The interplay between Rhodes and the department employees could have gotten old in less skilled hands, but Rhodes pulled it off.

Fans of a slightly slower paced mystery that puts the focus on character rather than action will want to savor this slow-cooked short novel.

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