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Slow Dollar
  

Slow Dollar (Audio Cassette)

by Margaret Maron (Author), C. J. Critt (Narrator)
5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (14 customer reviews)

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Product Details


Product Description

From Amazon.com

You can almost smell the cotton candy and hear the barkers inviting you to try your skill at a game of chance in this lively new mystery starring Colleton County, North Carolina, Judge Deborah Knott. Knott's stunned to discover that Brazos Hartley, murdered on the midway at the Harvest Festival carnival, was a member of her family; his mother, Tally Ames, is Deborah's first cousin, born of a shotgun marriage and abandoned as a child by her father, Deborah's brother. Naturally, when there's a second carnival murder, Deborah can't help getting involved in the investigation, even if it means uncovering secrets some of her relatives would just as soon keep confidential. The huge Knott clan, with Deborah at its center, gives Maron a wealth of material (the judge herself is one of 12 siblings!), which she makes the most of with wonderfully drawn characters and a beautifully evoked setting. The next best thing to a summer night at a country carnival, Slow Dollar is a standout in a series that just keeps getting better. --Jane Adams --This text refers to the Hardcover edition.


From Publishers Weekly

Step right up! Play a game and win your girl a prize! The carnival's in town and Maron brings to this ninth Judge Deborah Knott mystery (after 2001s Uncommon Clay) the vigor and verve that have served her so well to date. Larceny, both grand and small, as well as death hover over the Ames Amusement Corporations show on its arrival in Colleton County, N.C. Deborah, her irrepressible siblings (she's one of 12, the youngest and the only female) and some newfound kinfolk gather to mourn her great-nephew and carnival worker Brazos Hartley, after the young man is stomped to death, his mouth stuffed with quarters. The rural North Carolina dialogue and "carny" talk are perfect, especially descriptions of food, fashion and enchanting scenery of Indian summer in the South. The author draws family relationships so clearly you feel you could melt right into the crowd for barbecue, biscuits, slaw and cobbler. Before Maron is done, there's a bizarre theft of some tacky paintings, a second murder and a steamy romance. Is Judge Knott finally going to settle down and marry? Maron is one of the most seamless Southern authors since Margaret Mitchell, yet she beautifully writes a series about a New York police detective, Lieut. Sigrid Harald, with equal authority. A Knott family tree and a glossary of carny terms round out a novel that Nero Wolfe would describe as most satisfactory!
Copyright 2002 Reed Business Information, Inc. --This text refers to the Hardcover edition.

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Customer Reviews

14 Reviews
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Average Customer Review
5.0 out of 5 stars (14 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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Most helpful customer reviews

 
5.0 out of 5 stars :), Jun 22 2004
By A Customer
this is a great book! i'm glad that i discovered margaret maron.
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5.0 out of 5 stars :), Jun 22 2004
By A Customer
i really like this book! it's great to discover a new mystery author.
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5.0 out of 5 stars Better and Better, Jan 20 2004
By Louis M. Perdue (Amsterdam, the Netherlands) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This is one of the few mystery series going today that, even with this, the 9th entry, just keeps getting better. There has been only one book (Killer Market) in this series that I found to be even a bit lacking and that is quite unusual in a series that has gone on this long. In this episode, Judge Deborah Knott goes to the local carnival with her friends and discovers a dead body. As she works to solve the murder with her friend Dwight, we are exposed to more of her large family, but it really never gets confusing. Maron manages to make it clear who belongs to whom, even with the added relatives that this tale brings into the picture. The mystery is interesting and hard to solve and, just as importantly, there is progress in Deborah's personal life that is very satisfying to read. I know that Maron's next book is a stand-alone (neither a Knott nor a Harald book...will she ever write more Sigrid Harald books?) but I will definitely buy it. I just hope she returns to North Carolina soon.
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Most recent customer reviews

5.0 out of 5 stars A welcome return to greatness in the Knott series
I thought the last several books in the Deborah Knott series were pretty poor. Mechanical plots, dull characters, uninteresting and implausible mystery solutions. Read more
Published on May 23 2003

5.0 out of 5 stars Behind-the-scenes carnival life
Margaret Maron's Deborah Knott Series is a delight and this book certainly does not disappoint. In this latest installment, Judge Knott presides at a case where four young men... Read more
Published on Dec 14 2002 by Karen Potts

5.0 out of 5 stars Judge this one a winner!
Deborah Knott, youngest of twelve children and only daughter of ex-bootlegger Kezzie Knott, is a circuit judge in rural North Carolina. Read more
Published on Nov 1 2002 by Dr Cathy Goodwin

5.0 out of 5 stars Deborah Knott is back!
Judge Deborah Knott's complicated and extensive family structure gets even more complex in this, her 9th outing for Maron's compelling tales in North Carolina. Read more
Published on Oct 29 2002 by L. Quido

5.0 out of 5 stars Involving characters, family, and carnival detail. Fine
Judge Deborah Knott suspects something odd about the carnival that has come to her small North Carolina town, but she doesn't expect murder. Read more
Published on Oct 10 2002 by booksforabuck

5.0 out of 5 stars Pick this one up!!
This book was pure pleasure. Living in NC I like to read regional authors. Maron's best book to date.
Published on Oct 9 2002 by Mamapuppy

5.0 out of 5 stars A great book in a great series
Judge Deborah Knott, her incredible family and their southern-fried lives are a big part of what makes this series so satisfying to me. Read more
Published on Sep 10 2002

5.0 out of 5 stars Possibly the best of the series
I have loved Margaret Maron's books for years, and have loved Deborah Knott and her huge family since "Bootlegger's Daughter. Read more
Published on Aug 26 2002 by Lawrence W. Prichard

5.0 out of 5 stars Judge Knott discovers a long lost relative and murder
When the carnival comes to Dobbs, Deborah has already met the owner. Two drunken fools damaged one of her rides and Deborah was the judge to hear the case. Read more
Published on Aug 20 2002 by Moe811

5.0 out of 5 stars clever regional mystery
Judge Deborah Knott of Colleton County, North Carolina first meets Tally Ames in the courtroom when the carnival owner presses charges against three local men who damaged one of... Read more
Published on Aug 17 2002 by Harriet Klausner

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