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The Bug Funeral: A Professor Simon Shaw Mystery
 
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The Bug Funeral: A Professor Simon Shaw Mystery [Large Print] (Hardcover)

by Sarah R. Shaber (Author)
4.5 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)

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From Publishers Weekly

In Shaber's fourth intriguing Simon Shaw whodunit (after 2003's The Fugitive King), the mild-mannered professor at Kenan College in Raleigh, N.C., has earned a reputation as a "forensic historian," that is, an expert in solving long-ago crimes. When a friend's goddaughter, Helen Williams, tells him that she may be the reincarnation of a woman who murdered her child a century earlier, Simon is ready to dismiss Helen's claim as nonsense. A cursory inquiry reveals nothing, and he thinks he's off the hook. After a curious incident changes his mind, Simon becomes engrossed in a methodical and thorough investigation that not only will put him and Helen in danger but also will heat up a cold case to the boiling point. The reincarnation debate between believers and skeptics, epitomized in epigraphs that head each chapter, adds to the suspense. Credible characters, smooth and natural dialogue, charming descriptions of Raleigh at Christmastime and a creative solution to the mystery all lift this well above the cozy average.
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved. --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.


Product Description

The media has dubbed University of North Carolina history professor Simon Shaw a 'forensic historian' for his success at investigating murders that occurred over the last century. In The Bug Funeral, Simon investigates a killing at a Raleigh orphanage at the turn of the twentieth century. Professor Shaw is faced with a case that can destroy his reputation as a scholar if word should get out. A friend asks him to help his goddaughter, a young woman plagued by the belief that in a past life she committed infanticide. Shaw reluctantly tries to help her discover a rational basis for her disturbing 'memories.' If he fails to explain them rationally, the erstwhile 'forensic historian' is in danger of being ridi-culed all over the campus and beyond. --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

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4.5 out of 5 stars (2 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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5.0 out of 5 stars charming amateur sleuth, April 29 2004
By Harriet Klausner - See all my reviews
(TOP 500 REVIEWER)    (REAL NAME)   
Pulitzer Prize winning author Simon Shaw is a tenured professor at Kenan College in the historic part of downtown Raleigh, North Carolina. He is famous for solving three cold cases and has become known as a forensic historian. Helen Williams is referred to Simon by a mutual friend because she has a very big problem. She has the memories of an Annie Evans who lived in Raleigh in 1910 and remembers burying an eighteen month baby girl in an unmarked grave.

Neither Simon nor Helen believes in reincarnation or past life memories but the traumas she dreams about as Annie are making her a nervous wreck. She wants a logical answer for these memories and she hopes Simon can help her. Although at first Simon thinks she's mentally disturbed he agrees to look into the matter and is shocked to find out that Annie Evans did exist. As he is researching her life, he questions many people who knew her and one of them is murdered leading Helen and Simon to believe that there is a secret involving Annie that someone doesn't want revealed.

The protagonist is a historian who uses primary and secondary sources to move forward his investigation and it is fascinating to watch him go from not believing in Annie to piecing together the important parts of her life. The relationship between Annie to Helen is as much a mystery as the murder of one of Simon's interviewees and readers will feel totally satisfied with the outcome to both puzzles. THE BUG FUNERAL is a charming amateur sleuth tale.

Harriet Klausner

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4.0 out of 5 stars a fast and intriguing read, April 28 2004
By tregatt (Portland, Oregon) - See all my reviews
If word got out that respected history Professor Simon Shaw was investigating a case of supposed reincarnation, his reputation and career would be cooked. But that is exactly the situation that Simon finds himself in when in response to a plea from a good friend, he agrees to see Helen Williams. Ever since she was a child, Helen has had memories of someone else's life -- a woman (Annie Evans) who lived at the turn of the century in Raleigh, North Carolina (the very town that Simon's university is in). In an ironic twist, what Helen wants is not for Simon to prove that she really is Annie Evans reincarnated as Helen Williams, but to prove that her "memories" of Annie's life are completely false, especially since part of Helen's memories include Annie's involvement in the burial of a baby. Wanting absolutely noting to do with this particular case, but compelled to help, Simon begins to investigate Helen's "memories" and finds himself being reluctantly and deeply drawn into the case. Far too many of Helen's "memories" are turning out to be fact -- could Helen be a case of true reincarnation after all?

"The Bug Funeral" was a very fast and engrossing read. Simon's latest case proved to be truly intriguing and very engaging one, and I found myself drawn into the mystery from the very first page. Sarah R. Shaber definitely knows how to write and present a good Malice Domestic mystery novel that will keep you guessing and riveted till the very last page. And while Simon Shaw may not have matured much over the past few years, and while I found his rigid approach to the whole reincarnation notion a bit trying, I'd still vote this as a good read.

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