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Digging Up Momma
 
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Digging Up Momma (Hardcover)

by Sarah Shankman (Author)
3.3 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (3 customer reviews)

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From Publishers Weekly

Melodrama reigns in this seventh in the series, which finds Samantha Adams, author of books on the bizarre, starring in her own personal Twilight Zone episode. Sam gets a letter from her mother, who was presumed to have died in a plane crash when Sam was eight, asking for her help. With enough information to sound authentic, the letter prompts Sam to leave New Orleans for Santa Fe immediately. Sam and her mother have a brief reunion, but before explanations are offered, the older woman dies, an apparent suicide. Desperate to understand her mother's past, Sam probes her life in Santa Fe and meets her tenant (an artist who paints cars), her lawyer and other denizens of the desert who fill in some of the blanks for the grieving daughter. What Sam learns makes her doubt the police verdict of suicide. Fleshing out the narrative, Shankman tacks on a subplot about a local televangelist and his wife. The story of Sam's mother exerts an emotional pull?but on easily plucked heartstrings, which, added to an unconvincing villain, diminishes this tale's overall impact.
Copyright 1998 Reed Business Information, Inc.


From Library Journal

In receipt of a cryptic message from her mother?who supposedly died in a plane crash 34 years ago?series sleuth Samantha Adams (He Was Her Man, LJ 10/1/93), crime reporter-turned-writer, flies to Santa Fe. She meets mom (a successful interior designer) long enough to realize that she lives in constant fear, then loses her hours later to an apparent suicide. Sam's investigation into her mother's past brings immediate trouble in the form of dangerously deceitful suspects, a trashed house, attempted murder, and a forbidding turquoise mine. Shankman sticks with her proven formula: a strong protagonist, fascinating plot, and effective setting. An essential purchase.
Copyright 1998 Reed Business Information, Inc.

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Customer Reviews

3 Reviews
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Average Customer Review
3.3 out of 5 stars (3 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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1.0 out of 5 stars absolutely awful, Dec 15 2001
By A Customer
This is the latest and worst Sam Adams book. Reading this is like reading an afterthought of ms shankman's. Why do we need to know what happened to Sam's mother? And why have this all of a sudden mystery about it? Why didn't George or Peaches drop hints about Sam's mother in all the previous books? It would have worked better,and this book would have been more successful and plausible. Truly,I think that Ms Shankman only wrote this book because she had to fulfill her contract. If you really want to read Sam Adams books,go read King is Dead which is HILARIOUS or Hang all the Liars,or better read Now lets talk of graves
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4.0 out of 5 stars Follow The Plot, Not the Money!, Feb 2 1998
By A Customer
Dr.Konnilyn Feig: Have read all of Shankman's books. Routinely find them enjoyable. Her newest is no exception. She always writes well - and that's nice. She always has good character development - and that's pleasant. So do others. Her plot development, however, makes her stand out. It is always intriguing and - well, fun. The latest also has elements of pathos. You see, I am always the reader who wants the lost child to be found, the disappearing father to reemerge, the dead mother to be resurrected, the vanishing fiancé to return. I even want a dog vanishing during a vacation trip to make it back home 500 miles later over mountains, through forests, across streams! I wanted to say to Sarah S., "Bring 'em all back." But to remain a good craftsman, she would have to say, "No, can't." So - I liked this theme and this book - even though I wish----.
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5.0 out of 5 stars Great Read, Dec 19 1997
By A Customer
Samantha Adams, hot shot journalist, is afraid to love again having learned how much it hurts to lose a beloved one to death. Now, one of her loved ones has returned from the dead. Her mother Johanna, who allegedly died thirty-four years ago in a plane crash, has asked Samantha to meet her in a Santa Fe hotel.

Samantha catches the first plane to New Mexico and the couple shares a poignant reunion. That first night together, Johanna does not explain to her daughter why she let everyone think she was dead, figuring on telling her daugther tomorrow. An emotionally drained Sam does not have the energy to ask. The next day, the police inform Sam that her mother is dead, an apparent suicide. Sam believes that there is more to her mother's death than an autopsy would reveal and she begins to investigate her mother's death in order to learn the truth as to why she was abandonned over three decades ago.

DIGGING UP MOMMA, the latest novel in the highly regarded "Adams series", is a sure shot winner. As in the previous books, the heroine, once again, is a classic empathetic, angst-laden soul and readers love her for that. Additionally, this time the readers have the chance to satiate their curiosity by learning her mother's tale. Besides mystery fans, the book will appeal to New Age readers. However, it is Sam's torment that turns a very good who-done-it into a great novel.

Harriet Klausner

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