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Painted Lady: A James P. Dandy Elderhostel Mystery
  

Painted Lady: A James P. Dandy Elderhostel Mystery [Large Print] (Hardcover)

de Peter E. Abresch (Author)
4.0étoiles sur 5  Voir tous les commentaires (4 évaluations de client)

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Just before an Elderhostel trip along the Santa Fe Trail, physical therapist and sleuth James P. "Jim" Dandy sees a Native American woman fall from a building next to his Denver hotel. Once the trip starts, a spectral likeness of the woman starts appearing in the paintings of Jim's lover, Dodee Fisher. After an Elderhostel participant is murdered, Jim and Dodee hurry to solve the murders--before they become the next victims. This fourth entry in the series starts slowly but soon hits its stride as Abresch combines a suspect-rich plot with a revealing glimpse of small-town life and some evocative descriptions of the desert and mountains of the Southwest. Fans of series by such southwestern mystery authors as Tony Hillerman, Margaret Coel, and James Doss should also check out Abresch's Jim Dandy. John Rowen
Copyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved This text refers to an alternate Hardcover edition.

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4 évaluations
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4.0étoiles sur 5 (4 évaluations de client)
 
 
 
 
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1.0étoiles sur 5 A stretch of imagination...., Avril 29 2004
Par Judith Lindenau "dulcie22" (Traverse City, MI USA) - Voir tous mes commentaires
(REAL NAME)   
One of the reasons I enjoy reading mysteries is for the background: the settings, the characters, the specialized information. But even the quaint setting of "Painted Lady" couldn't save this book: the writing is amateurish, the plot mechanisms unbelievable, and the background filled with every novice trick imaginable. Lest I sound too harsh, consider paper with a watermark that coincidently assumes the shape of a murdered woman when wet--that's the crux of the mystery here. And then there are ghosts, which obediently appear during a seance and drop clues. There are the shallow characters, as well: the college professor who will poison and murder to get job security, but who only makes a cameo appearance in the book as a handy way to turn the plot. And what passes for background information in the Elderhostel setting is a repeated description of the cologne worn by the hero, the number of bathroom stops on the bus trip, and the contents of the daily box lunch.

I've read other novels by Peter Abresch, and found them mildly entertaining. But perhaps I've read one too many: this one was merely a bore.

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5.0étoiles sur 5 Jim and Dodee hit the Santa Fe Trail, Aoû 26 2003
I thoroughly enjoyed this latest entry in the Elderhostel mystery series. The story begins in Denver, where James P. Dandy and his ladylove, Dodee Swisher, have joined their group for a tour of the old Santa Fe Trail. When an Indian medicine woman falls, or is pushed, from a rooftop, Jim witnesses the fall, and before long a variety of mysterious characters are dogging him. To make matters worse, the medicine woman's image keeps showing up in Dodee's paintings.

PAINTED LADY is fun. Jim's a [frisky] rascal, and Dodee is a willing partner, so there's plenty of hanky-panky to go along with the OooOOOooo. History of the Old West is woven throughout. There's a legendary Mayan falcon with diamond eyes, a kidnapping, a hilarious bus-car chase, an otherworldly shootout at the St. James (aka Ghost Hotel) in Cimarron.

It's all enough to make even the skeptical Jim Dandy wonder: "Was there some kind of time-link between then and now, where the present and past brushed by one another? Like a light-link or light shift in desert mirages, creating an apparent swimming pool or water scene that really existed, but miles away from where it appeared."

There's also a true story about dandelions, which may give you pause the next time you start to dig one out of your lawn. Be sure to read the author's Acknowledgments, dedication, and Afterwords.

For me, PAINTED LADY was the pause that refreshes.

Pat Browning
Author of FULL CIRCLE

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5.0étoiles sur 5 charming mystery, Avril 13 2003
Par Harriet Klausner - Voir tous mes commentaires
(TOP 500 REVIEWER)    (REAL NAME)   
Elderhostels are trips that senior citizens take when they want to see the country or do things they have never done before. Jim Dandy (a part-time EMT/physical therapist) and Dodee Swisher (an artist with her own gallery) fell in love at their first Elderhostel and have gone on others as a way of being together since they live in different states. Their latest trip is by motorcoach traveling the old Santa Fe Trail but even before they start, a murder occurs.

While Jim waits for her in a hotel hospitality suite, Dodee conducts business. He sees a woman dressed in Indian clothing falling from the roof and is the first one to reach the dead woman. They later find out she was a shaman who supposedly knew the whereabouts of the Mayan Falcon, a gold statue with diamond eyes. Jim and Dodee notice someone is following them and a few a days later someone kidnaps her by someone who thinks Jim has the statue. After a mad chase by Jim and the Elderhostel bus driver, Dodee is rescued but the kidnapper gets away. When their next door neighbor is killed it's obvious that somebody thinks Jim has the statue or knows where it is located. Dodee is determined to solve the mystery so both her and Jim will be safe.

It's great to have Dodee and Jim reunited after such a long time away; the duo are even more down-to-earth and raunchy than ever. The couple is living proof that love and sex don't fly out the window after fifty or does brain matter dissolve. The protagonists are sharp and able to figure things out when younger and supposedly wiser heads fail miserably. PAINTED LADY is a charming mystery that gives the reader a good visual of the Santa Fe Trail.

Harriet Klausner

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Commentaires client les plus récents

5.0étoiles sur 5 He's a Jim Dandy!
Let me start off by saying that I love it when I actually learn something while being entertained by a good book. Read more
Publié le Avril 10 2003 par Brian D. Rubendall

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