Bake sale murder
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- ISBN: 0758207026
- ISBN: 9780758207029
- Physical Description 288 pages.
- Publisher New York : Kensington Pub., [2007]
- Copyright ©2006
Content descriptions
General Note: | "Kensington Books." |
Immediate Source of Acquisition Note: | LSC 9.99 |
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Kirkus Review
Bake Sale Murder
Kirkus Reviews
Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.
Life in a small Maine coastal town is disrupted by the advent of People Not Like Us. Longtime Tinker's Cove resident Lucy Stone (Birthday Party Murder, 2002, etc.) "wouldn't mind these new folks if they'd know their place." But the residents of Fred Stanton's spanking-new development at the end of Red Top Road simply don't. Preston Stanton, 18, buzzes the neighbors with his motorcycle. His mother, Mimi, suggests that Lucy's prize lilacs are obstructing her view of traffic. Divorced mother Frankie LaChance lets her daughter sunbathe on the porch. Ex-businesswoman Chris Cashman has the nerve to suggest that Sue Finch's Better-Than-Sex brownies have too much fat to include in the Hat and Mittens Fund's upcoming bake sale. Still, when Lucy discovers Mimi in her kitchen with a knife in her back and a batch of Yummy Pumpkin Kisses burning in the oven, she feels it's her civic duty to investigate, and to look into the allegations of hazing by members of the local high-school football team--allegations hotly denied by Coach Buck Burkhart, another newcomer who's become a local hero since the Warriors started winning, and pooh-poohed by School Superintendent Bob Sabin. A second death and some tearful outbursts by her cheerleader daughter Sara confirm Lucy's conviction that there's trouble in paradise. Although a little crisper than earlier entries, Meier's latest entry still lets small-town banter crowd its mystery into the back pages. Copyright ©Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.
Publishers Weekly Review
Bake Sale Murder
Publishers Weekly
(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
In Meier's disjointed 13th Lucy Stone mystery (after 2005's New Year's Eve Murder), the Tinker's Cove, Maine, newspaper reporter has a whole subdivision of peculiar neighbors around her once peaceful farmhouse, and anonymous letters are arriving at her office. The unknown penman alleges that the new football coach, Buck Burkhart, is condoning unsavory behavior by the high school's senior football players toward the junior players and the cheerleaders, one of whom is Lucy's daughter, Sara. But no one is talking or listening, as the coach launches his lackluster team into a victorious season. Then Lucy finds Burkhart's neighbor, one of her volunteer bakers, knifed to death in her kitchen. And what about the homeless man? The philandering veterinarian? The victim's bad-tempered husband? The author makes only a halfhearted effort to connect all the dots, while the one big break in the murders comes, unpleasantly and literally, through Lucy's dog, Libby. (Dec.) (c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved