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Murder In The Lincoln Bedroom: An Eleanor Roosevelt Mystery
 
 

Murder In The Lincoln Bedroom: An Eleanor Roosevelt Mystery (Mass Market Paperback)

by Elliott Roosevelt (Author) "MRS. ROOSEVELT STOOD AT a window in her study and watched cars arrive ..." (more)
3.8 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (4 customer reviews)

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From Publishers Weekly

Once again, Eleanor Roosevelt calmly juggles her official duties as First Lady with her unofficial role as amateur sleuth in this unpretentious, undemanding offering attributed to her late son Elliott, who according to St. Martin's left behind a number of unpublished manuscripts when he died. When lawyer Paul Weyrich, special White House counsel, turns up dead in the Lincoln Bedroom with an unauthorized gun in his suit jacket, Mrs. Roosevelt takes on the case, aided by old friend D.C. police captain Ed Kennelly. Since FDR is busy hosting the secret Trident Conference to plot the liberation of Europe with guests Prime Minister Churchill and General Eisenhower, it's vitally important that nothing disturb their deliberations. In between interviewing Weyrich's "Government Girl" girlfriend and other suspects, the First Lady mingles with such celebrities of the day as Danny Kaye and Jack Benny. In a sly touch, the author is himself the subject of a Hollywood tale told by Humphrey Bogart that reflects on the young man's discretion. ("Elliott has not invariably used good judgment," comments the First Lady.) While the villains behind the murder soon become obvious, the victim's method of smuggling a gun inside the executive mansion is quite ingenious. And if in the end the motivation for the murder is weak, it really doesn't matter, for it's the sympathetic portrayal of the people in the Roosevelt White House that ultimately counts in this unique series. (Nov.)
Copyright 2000 Reed Business Information, Inc. --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.


From Booklist

To the benefit of many older readers and political history buffs, the late Elliott Roosevelt, son of FDR and Eleanor, seems to have left behind a considerable number of unpublished mysteries--further installments in his White House series starring Eleanor as the resident sleuth. In this one, a plan is afoot to assassinate FDR in the midst of a secret meeting with Winston Churchill and Generals Marshall and Eisenhower. Sundry other famous people, from Humphrey Bogart to Hedda Hopper, make passing appearances as the heads of state plan when to invade France. As in the other entries in the series, figuring out the whodunit element is not likely to cause sleepless nights, but the plot is decently constructed, and the whole is painlessly entertaining. At the risk of giving away the story, FDR evades the baddies, and the Allies win the war. Budd Arthur
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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4 Reviews
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Average Customer Review
3.8 out of 5 stars (4 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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5.0 out of 5 stars What a great glimpse into history!, Jan 28 2004
By Patricia K. Teague (Cullman, AL United States) - See all my reviews
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For anyone who loves history (and my preferred historical periods are the Great Depression and World War II), Elliott Roosevelt offers the sense that you are actually there, reliving the events themselves. So many facts that he includes in his books are historically accurate, and a delight to encounter in a novel. His mysteries are, to me, less about solving various murders than about his fascinating parents, Franklin and Eleanor Roosevelt. And the mysteries are pretty good, too! I'd recommend them to anyone.
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4.0 out of 5 stars A Plot To Assassinate The President, Mar 25 2003
By George Webster, Ph.D., (Orlando, FL USA) - See all my reviews
Elliott Roosevelt has written a series of mysteries in which his mother, the First Lady, solves one or more murders. Each gives us a mystery plus a sense of the White House and popular culture during the Roosevelt administration in the 1930-1940 era. In this story, it is 1943. The allies and the axis powers are fighting desperately around the world. Winston Churchill and his Generals have come to the White House secretly to plan the invasion of France. But upstairs, a policeman finds the body of one of the President's aides, murdered in the Lincoln Bedroom. Realizing that this must be kept secret because of the conference, Eleanor Roosevelt sets out to solve the killing. With the aid of a Secret Service agent and a Washington Police detective, she uncovers and thwarts a plot to assassinate the President. The book is enjoyable, more for the flavor of 1943 than for its simple plot, but it is a smooth-reading story.
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2.0 out of 5 stars Old fashioned story..., Nov 2 2001
By Adi Adler (Atlanta, GA United States) - See all my reviews
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... and very boring. The pace of the book is slow, and it is very conservative in its ideas. Even though I don't enjoy excessive dirty language, the morals of this book are so different than the 'modern' ones that it makes it hard to thoroughly understand, especially for a non - American who doesn't have the proper historical background.

Then why 2 stars? Because I think that this is the sort of book can appeal to people who are looking for all the points mentioned above in a book - the slower pace, the historical perspective and 'name dropping', etc.

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4.0 out of 5 stars Good read in this long running series
In 1943, the Roosevelt White House worries about the corpse of attorney Paul Weyrich found in the Lincoln Bedroom due to the timing of the event. Read more
Published on Nov 12 2000 by Harriet Klausner

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