From Publishers Weekly
The engaging 24th Father Dowling mystery (after 2004's
Requiem for a Realtor) explores the moral ambiguities of the choices people make in the wake of a young woman's unwanted pregnancy. McInerny uses a full palette of nothing but grays as Martha Lynch seeks to learn the identity of her birth mother on the eve of her engagement. At the same time, Nathaniel Fleck, who turned his back on Madeline years earlier when she was pregnant, is determined to learn the fate of his child and to make amends. Almost everyone involved, from a lecherous oldster to a sleazy lawyer, shows at least a modicum of decency. And some, like Father Dowling and lawyer Amos Cadbury, both privy to Madeline's and Martha's identities, carefully weigh the one's need for secrecy and the other's for knowledge. When Fleck dies in a suspicious accident, the question becomes not only how the ramifications of Martha's parentage will play out but did someone resort to murder to keep Fleck from finding the answer? McInerny's nimble characterizations and subtle soundings of the moral issues make this a strong entry in the long-running series.
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From Booklist
Father Dowling, the parish priest who seems to spend an inordinate amount of time solving crimes, returns in this intricate tale of murder and family history. The murder part is pretty straightforward: Nathaniel Fleck, who has been trying to reestablish contact with his estranged daughter (she was adopted by another couple 23 years ago), turns up dead. The rest of the story is more complicated. Fleck's daughter has been trying to find her birth parents. Fleck, her birth father, contacted the girl's birth mother (from whom he was also estranged), who then turned to a lawyer for advice. Now, Father Dowling and the lawyer, Amos Cadbury, not only have to solve Fleck's murder but they also must try to keep his death from destroying the young woman's two families. The Father Dowling mysteries have always combined mystery and morality effectively, and this one is no exception. Fans will be pleased.
David PittCopyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved
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