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Death in the Family
 
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Death in the Family [Large Print] (Hardcover)

by Jill McGown (Author)
2.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (1 customer review)

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From Publishers Weekly

In this exemplary police procedural, the 12th in McGown's Lloyd and Hill Mysteries (Scene of Crime, etc.), DCI Judy Hill and her partner and fiance, DCI Lloyd, are enjoying their newborn daughter while she pursues a baby kidnapping case and he investigates a brutal murder. McGown's expertly crafted, fast-moving plot contains enough red herrings to keep even the most astute readers on their toes. With his obsession with correct grammar and his habit of creating various scenarios to help him solve a case, Lloyd makes an original yet classic detective. Ambitious and adventuresome, Hill is a modern woman who is just as qualified as Lloyd. Together they make an incomparable team. This is a stellar must-read, bound to delight existing fans and send newcomers seeking the rest of the series.century's "100 Masters of Crime."
Copyright 2003 Reed Business Information, Inc.


From Booklist

Here's the twelfth in the British author's series of mysteries featuring Detective Chief Inspector Judy Hill and her partner and fiance, DCI Lloyd (he has a first name, but he prefers we don't use it). This time around, the partners are facing some challenges: a baby has just been kidnapped; some people have been savagely attacked; and Hill and Lloyd have welcomed, nearly a month early, their daughter into the world. If you're a fan of the series, its delicate narrative and gentle pace (we're nearly halfway through the story before anything really happens) will be familiar and comfortable; if you're not a fan, those same features may seem annoying, as though the author were taking way too long to get to the story. Still, both fans and mystery lovers just looking for a good read will savor McGown's rich, detailed character studies (she can build a character at least as well as Ruth Rendell) and dead-on dialogue. In every way, it's a typical Hill/Lloyd mystery, and for fans, that's a very good thing. David Pitt
Copyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved

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2.0 out of 5 stars Definately Not a Thriller, Jun 14 2003
By Linda One "Lol925" (Burleson, Texas United States) - See all my reviews
This is the first Jill McGown hard-bound book I've bought and it will be the last. Her books have always been enthralling, but I had to force myself to finish this book. Characters, at times, said things that made absolutely no sense so the writing was not tight and clean. By the end, I was just glad the story was over and I could go on to something else. A minor aggravation was two grammatical mistakes Lloyd makes in his speech in the first half of the book when he is supposed to be a stickler for using English correctly.

In this novel, Judy has had her baby and there is endless information on the new relationship between Lloyd, Judy and the baby. Yes, their relationship has always been a strong part of her novels, but in this novel, there is more drama than mystery. In fact, the mystery is extremely shortlived. A less-than-sympathetic victim is murdered and Lloyd misses the obvious so many times it makes the reader wonder if he is really a moron who has only been successful in the past because Judy was working with him. McGown totally vindicates every single suspect so that if you don't guess who the murderer is, YOU are a moron. It is so painfully obvious who the murderer is that it is trying to have to keep reading about Lloyd floundering around, never even considering the actual murderer as a suspect.

The only surprise is the motive behind the murder, but by the time one gets to the motivation behind the murder, it is of very little interest.

There is a subplot about a missing baby but the author unfairly withholds information from the reader and again Lloyd does not investigate that situation like a real cop. Lloyd continually theorizes about who could have done what to whom rather than proceeding with an investigation, and that gets tiring. It is one thing to theorize about motivation or how the murder was accomplished, but to theorize about something that he could be investigating is a waste of Lloyd's time and ours.

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