From Amazon.com
Hilda Johansson is a maid in the South Bend, Indiana, home of the Studebakers, wealthy industrialists who supply the carriages of the landed gentry, own the factories that keep the city's coffers full, and are fervent supporters of President William McKinley. A hard-working immigrant, Hilda is painfully aware of the social gap between her and her employers. But when the president is assassinated and the press and police as well as the Studebakers blame the deed on foreign-born anarchists, Hilda's loyalties to her adopted country conflict with her concern that fellow immigrants might be swept up in a wave of xenophobia that could destroy the lives of innocent people.
In addition, there's trouble brewing at the Studebaker plant, but no one, including Hilda's own brother, a key employee there, will tell her what's happening. And then another man is murdered--the builder of the new city hall, who's been a guest in the Studebaker house. His death further enflames the bias against foreigners that threatens to destroy the social and economic fabric of South Bend. Anxious to protect her friends, Hilda puts her Old World values and her considerable sleuthing powers to work to clear a wrongfully accused suspect, the brother of her closest friend, and in the process manages to unmask the real killer. Red, White, and Blue Murder is Hilda's second appearance (the first was Death in Lacquer Red). Author Jeanne M. Dams has fashioned a refreshing character who serves as more than just a backdrop for an interesting, relatively bloodless historical mystery that aptly depicts the American melting pot at the turn of the 20th century. --Jane Adams
--This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.
From Publishers Weekly
After building a readership with her stories of a contemporary American sleuth, Dorothy Martin, plying her skills in England (The Body in the Transept, Trouble in the Town Hall, etc.), Dams launched a new series with last year's Death in Lacquer Red. A historical set in the author's native South Bend, Ind., that novel introduced Hilda Johansson, a resourceful Swedish immigrant housemaid. Here Hilda returns for a second outing in which murders both local and national disturb the city's tranquillity. In the summer of 1901, class-consciousness, anti-immigrant bias and general chauvinism bubble beneath the surface of outwardly staid South Bend. The shooting of President William McKinley by Polish anarchist Leon Czolgosz in Buffalo and the murder of a prominent local builder, Roger Warren, threaten to inflame sentiments against all immigrants. Worse, Flynn Murphy, the brother of Hilda's friend Norah, is the chief suspect in Warren's murder. Despite the constraints of her position in the household of the wealthy Studebaker family, Hilda is determined to exonerate Flynn by uncovering the real murderer. Though she must grapple with a new language, a new country and the many limitations of her class and gender, Hilda proves up to the task. The insights into working-class life of a century ago are an added bonus in this entertaining mystery. Agent, Reece Halsey Agency North.
Copyright 2000 Reed Business Information, Inc.
--This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.