Oct 202011
 

Tess Monaghan, Laura Lippman’s heroine, as the author describes her in

Baltimore Blues, is out of work and out of unemployment benefits, although she has some freelance and part time work to keep ends at least close together if not meeting. Her favorite means of exercise and stress-relieving is rowing. Her commitment to that sport is blended throughout the tale.

Baltimore, Tess’s town, heading for record-breaking murder rate

Tess’s town, Baltimore, is likely to set an unprecedented, record-breaking murder rate, and Tess will soon find herself right in the middle of it all. It begins when Rock, a friend and rowing companion, confesses his worry that his girlfriend, Ava, may be in some sort of serious trouble. He offers to pay Tess, a former reporter, to follow Ava for a few days to uncover her secrets, if they do exist. Tess isn’t eager to do this, but the hourly rate he offers is irresistible to Tess in her present straightened circumstances.  She signs on. Continue reading »

Oct 192011
 

Culver’s character, Ashraf Rashid, is an unusual individual

He is a detective for the Indianapolis Police Department, a Muslim who prays on a daily schedule as do most followers of Islam. And he requires a drink or two, sometimes more—of alcohol, no less—now and then to keep him on an even keel. He cannot simply turn off his emotions at the end of a day. Ash’s challenges in this novel are numerous and intense. The story opens when he has to undertake a part of his job that he dislikes and dreads—telling a victim’s family of a death. Continue reading »