Lily Bard heads home to Bartley, Arkansas, for her sister Varena's Christmas wedding, but ends up involved in an investigation with her private detective boyfriend. But there's something in the air besides holiday cheer--there's murder. Original. ReviewsReturning home for her sister's Christmas wedding, Lily Bard‘cleaning woman, karate expert, and amateur sleuth‘finds more than just mistletoe: two murders and a four-year-old unsolved kidnapping. [See review on p. 128.‘Ed.] Harris, author of the Aurora Teagarden cozies, adds a touch of grit to her books featuring briskly efficient, 31-year-old Arkansas cleaning lady Lily Bard. Lily hides a traumatic past under a prickly exterior, but, in the series' third book (after Shakespeare's Champion, 1997), this karate expert lowers her defenses just long enough to reconcile with her family and help solve a series of grisly murders. Returning to her home town of Bartley (a stone's throw from her residence in Shakespeare, Ark.) for her sister Varena's wedding, Lily is plunged headlong into an eight-year-old kidnapping investigation after her lover and confidant, Jack Leeds, a PI with a questionable past, arrives to follow up an anonymous tip that the kidnapper and the missing girl are both in Bartley. When the town's beloved family practitioner, his nurse and a young mother are bludgeoned to death, suspicion falls on Varena's fiancé‘a widower who just happens to have an eight-year-old daughter. The investigation intensifies, and Lily uses her family connections and her impeccable cleaning skills to ferret out some crucial information. Harris tells a forceful story with a complex, flawed heroine who is wary of emotional attachments. The denizens of Bartley‘the shrewd sheriff; old high-school classmates with long memories; Lily's loving but overprotective parents‘form a memorable gallery of secondary characters. Harris's blend of cozy style with more hard-boiled elements isn't always smooth, but it's interesting to see her working toward a deeper complexity. (Nov.) " Fresher, more unusual, than any other mystery I've read lately." --"The Washington Post Book World" " This one works on every level. The writing and plotting are first-rate." --"The Washington Times" " A seamless story...In her Lily Bard novels, Charlaine Harris blends a noirish atmosphere with a traditional mystery." --"Fort Lauderdale Sun-Sentinel" |