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Suture Self
 
 

Suture Self (Hardcover)

by Mary Daheim (Author) "JUDITH GROVER MCMONIGLE Flynn took one look at the newspaper headline, released the brake on her wheelchair, and rolled into the kitchen ..." (more)
3.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (13 customer reviews)

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From Amazon.com

Judith McMonigle Flynn, the proprietress of Hillside Manor, a bed and breakfast located somewhere in the Pacific Northwest, ranges further afield than previously in Suture Self, the first hardcover mystery in Daheim's series. Wheeled away from her innkeeping duties and rolled into Good Cheer Hospital for a much-needed hip replacement, Judith brings her own hospital roomie: her trash-talking cousin Renie, who's checked into Good Cheer with Judith for a little orthopedic surgery of her own. Renie, who makes doctors, nurses, and hospital administrators want to take back their Hippocratic oaths and run for the hills, is a bitchy, whiny, sarcastic candidate for the most obnoxious patient of the year.

While Renie terrorizes the good sisters who run Good Cheer, Judith worries that the unlikely run of bad luck that's turned up the toes of a baseball star and an actress (both of whom checked into the hospital for minor surgery and checked out in body bags) will follow her into the operating room too. And when a third death occurs just as Judith and Renie are beginning their post-op convalescence, the cousins get their sleuthing act together and try to figure out what the killer's victims have in common and why they met their ends in a place devoted to the healing arts. Of course, that places the temporarily disabled ladies squarely in the sights of the murderer, whose identity is clear almost from the start to everyone except our gals. This isn't Daheim's strongest book; Creeps Suzette, Just Desserts, and Fowl Prey are better reads. But her many fans won't mind the slow pace and somewhat plodding unraveling of the plot, especially if they've ever had a bad hospital experience. There are people who love B & Bs and delight in near-bloodless mysteries. If you're looking for a get-well present for one of them, Suture Self might be it. --Jane Adams



From Publishers Weekly

Not quite up to Daheim's usual standards, the 17th in the author's Bed-and-Breakfast series (A Streetcar Named Expire; Creeps Suzette; etc.) finds amateur gumshoe Judith McMonigle Flynn sleuthing from her hospital bed, where she is recovering from hip surgery. Before entering the Good Cheer Hospital with her peppery cousin, Renie Jones, who is due to have surgery at the same time, the two women become very apprehensive on hearing of the mysterious deaths of two patients. When the man in the next room becomes the third victim, Judith and Renie begin to investigate. Life as patients grows even more complicated for the duo when a blizzard brings the town to a standstill; Judith hears that her b&b is crowded with stranded tourists and an escaped boa constrictor; strange packages arrive at her house; her private detective husband, Joe, accepts a dangerous case; her son Mike makes a request that causes much soul-searching; and the Good Cheer Hospital is threatened by a takeover. In spite of all this confusion, Judith discovers the identity of the murderer--but the revelation is no surprise to the reader. Even though loyal Daheim fans will relish the witty and revealing interactions between familiar characters, the final denouement of a complex murder scenario and the multitude of subplots depicted here are as tedious and wearing as the healing process after surgery. Agent, Maureen Moran. (Feb. 13)Forecast: A series that's run as long as this one isn't going to be hurt by one flat outing, but this entry won't win Daheim many new fans; nor will the book's cover--its depiction of someone in surgeon's clothing stitching a baseball seems likely to elicit shrugs from browsers.

Copyright 2001 Cahners Business Information, Inc.


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JUDITH GROVER MCMONIGLE Flynn took one look at the newspaper headline, released the brake on her wheelchair, and rolled into the kitchen. Read the first page
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Customer Reviews

13 Reviews
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4 star:
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Average Customer Review
3.0 out of 5 stars (13 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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2.0 out of 5 stars This one is a flatliner..., Aug 4 2003
Suture Self begins with two sleuthing cousins scheduled for surgery at Good Cheer Hospital. Two famous people have already ended up dead and a third expires as the cousins recuperate. There were so many weakneses in this story that when I put the book down it was hard to pick up again. First, it's unlikely that strangers would stream into their room to fill them in on things that were none of their business. Second, the drug and homeless angles were flimsy nonsense. Third, and most annoying, was that Renie person. Why would a writer, having the power to create likeable characters in prominent positions in a story spawn something like Renie Jones? The cursing, screaming, unsympathetic attitude, etc. was WAY over the top and detracted from the weak plot. Lastly, there was no element of surprise at the end. Who didn't figure out that Jim was the killer half way through the book?
This was my introduction to this B&B series. If I read any of the others they will be checked out of my local library.
CM Miller---Author, What She Left Behind
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1.0 out of 5 stars the real mystery is why anyone bought this, ever, May 29 2003
By Hepzibah P. Flurge (New Delaware, NH) - See all my reviews
I'm not a huge mystery fan but ... I had heard of the author and figured I'd give it a shot. Never again. Mary Daheim's writing style grated on my last nerve. The book lurches between one underdeveloped character after another, all of whom spout incredibly mannered and expository dialogue. One character, talking to her best friend in the whole world, says: "I understand that modern medicine is a mess, but it seems impossible in a country as rich and supposedly smart as the United States that we could have gotten into such a fix." No one - I repeat, NO ONE - talks that way. It's the author's voice ringing out of her character's mouth, as clanging and awkward as a broken bell.

The names of some of her characters are ludicrous. This may be a small point, but have you ever met anyone named Torchy Magee? Outside of a ... Mickey Spillane novel, I haven't either. How about Johnny Boxx (with two x's)? Or the talkative Mr. Mummy? I can see where she was trying to amuse, but the names are so ludicrous, they become distractions. You lose the thread of the narrative entirely, thinking to yourself, Torchy? Huh?

And then there was the appalling lack of fact-checking. As one reader pointed out, Mary Daheim may not know anything about hip surgery or rotator cuff replacement surgery. My complaint is that she just as obviously knows nothing about Ecstacy. It will not blind you, drive you crazy, or cause you to expire. You cannot kill someone by putting that particular "street drug", as she likes to call them, into a bottle of soda. Cocaine? Yes. Heroin? Yes. It would have been far simpler and much more realistic to have her various characters die of overdoses of drugs that would actually kill them. So why did she choose E as one of the linchpins of her novel? Maybe because of all the negative publicity about it. Maybe she wanted to be topical. She's obviously anti-narcotics, unless they're prescribed by a physician. One character tells us that all she knows about Ecstacy is that it "does terrible things" to you... then proceeds to pop a few Valium later that night when she can't sleep. ...

Fans have said this is one of Mary Daheim's weakest works, so maybe I should give her a second chance. I'd be willing to start another book by her... and just as willing to put it down after five pages if it's as horrible as this one was. ...

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1.0 out of 5 stars SUTURE SELF, Mar 2 2003
By Mrs. Dorothy Schmidt (Winchester, Wisconsin USA) - See all my reviews
Mary Daheim has obviously NOT had a hip replaced or she would of known that you DO need a walker and not just a wheel chair to get around after and that physical therapy starts one day after surgery. Also the obnoxious Renie sounds like a real jerk with all her screaming and whatever in a hospital. One sure can not wash their hair and take a shower after shoulder surgery either. This it the first book of the series I've read and don't know if I want to read another silly one of hers. Mary Daheim should do more research on her books and quit putting them out so fast!!!!
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Most recent customer reviews

2.0 out of 5 stars Probably the weakest....
I read both series written by Mary Daheim and I have to say, right away, that I prefer the Alpine Mysteries to this series, Bed-and-Breakfast. Read more
Published on Jun 26 2002 by Louis M. Perdue

3.0 out of 5 stars Not Her Best
This series is starting to lose its charm.

Renie, who I usually find mildly amusing, comes off as totally overbearing and obnoxious, to the point you hope the nurses will just... Read more

Published on May 7 2002

4.0 out of 5 stars A Book To Die For!
Mary Daheim's "Suture Self" is on of the most thrilling murder mysteries I have read so far. It is filled with shocking twists and turns that leave you guessing what will happen... Read more
Published on April 12 2002 by Camarillo Citizen

4.0 out of 5 stars A Book To Die For!
Mary Daheim's "Suture Self" is on of the most thrilling murder mysteries I have read so far. It is filled with shocking twists and turns that leave you guessing what will happen... Read more
Published on April 12 2002 by Camarillo Citizen

5.0 out of 5 stars The Best Yet!
I was getting slightly bored by her books and debated whether to even buy this one. I'm glad I did. I found it the best yet. I laughed out loud several times over Renie. Read more
Published on Mar 13 2002 by Judy Smith

4.0 out of 5 stars One of the best of the series
Everyone is a little leery of hospitals, but Good Cheer has good reason to make Judith and Renie nervous. Read more
Published on Feb 27 2002 by Moe811

1.0 out of 5 stars Needs a lot of doctoring
An anemic effort from someone who is touted on the cover as a best-selling author. I'd go back and check out the titles that gave her that status instead of reading this... Read more
Published on Feb 14 2002

3.0 out of 5 stars Give this one a pass...
I always get excited when I seem Mary Daheim's name as the author of a new bed-and-breakfast mystery...or at least I always USED to get excited. Read more
Published on Jan 27 2002 by Judith Lindenau

4.0 out of 5 stars Mysterious hospital deaths
Judith McMonigle Flynn needs to have a hip replacement, coincidentally at the same time that her cousin Renie is having shoulder surgery. Read more
Published on Jul 16 2001 by Karen Potts

5.0 out of 5 stars As cosys go, his is one of the best
When last seen, Judith McMonigle Flynn, owner of the Hillside Manor Bed and Breakfast, needs a hip replacement due to an accident that confines her to a wheelchair. Read more
Published on Feb 8 2001 by Harriet Klausner

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