CHECK IT OUT
There’s a trail of clues for first-rate whodunits in nominees for the
2002 Agatha Awards. When presented in May, the awards will solve the case
involving which authors penned the best traditional mysteries published
in 2001 -- works typified by the novels of Agatha Christie, generally
with a low body count and an amateur detective on center stage.
Those nominated as best novel include Earlene Fowler’s “Arkansas
Traveler.” In her eighth outing starring folk art expert Benni Harper,
the Orange County writer (a frequent Newport Beach Central Library user)
sends the frisky museum director to Sugartree, Ark. for a church reunion.
Finding friends and relatives embroiled in racial, religious and romantic
rivalries, Benni marshals her spunk to solve a killing that threatens to
scar the hometown she loves.
An equally spirited heroine stars in Rhys Bowen’s best novel nominee
“Murphy’s Law,” the first of a new series by the creator of Welsh
constable Evan Evens. Forced to flee her native Ireland after she kills a
young man who was trying to rape her, brash Molly Murphy thinks she has
found sanctuary on Ellis Island. When she becomes a suspect in another
murder, then finds herself attracted to the man trying to convict her, a
search for justice in Tammany Hall-era New York ensues.
The action is set closer to home in best novel nominee “Shadows of
Sin.” In her newest thriller, Rochelle Krich has West L.A. detective
Jessie Drake investigating a triple murder in a prominent plastic
surgeon’s office. Dysfunction is as tortuous as the twists in the plot,
in a cast that includes a reformed child abuser, a teen runaway and a
rabbi who runs a haven for disturbed youth.
Other quirky characters inhabit the Pennsylvania steel town where
Bubbles Yablonsky, beautician-sleuth of Sarah Strohmeyer’s best first
mystery nominee “Bubbles Unbound,” incriminates a wealthy socialite with
a brutal murder. Armed with her Two Guys Community College certificate
and fueled by Doritos and Diet Pepsi, the wannabe reporter overcomes
peril after peril on her way to solving the case, getting even with her
ex and creatively displaying her cleavage.
Whether or not it wins an Agatha for best nonfiction of 2001, Tony
Hillerman’s “Seldom Disappointed” is as entertaining as any of his Navajo
mysteries. With glimpses of his Depression-era childhood, World War II
experiences and career highlights, the best-selling author reveals
himself as a man of integrity, always ready to jump into life’s
adventures. At the Agatha Awards banquet this spring, those adventures
will include receiving this year’s Lifetime Achievement Award from Malice
Domestic, Ltd.
* CHECK IT OUT is written by the staff of the Newport Beach Public
Library. This week’s column is by Melissa Adams, in collaboration with
Claudia Peterman. All titles may be reserved from home or office
computers by accessing the catalog at o7 www.newportbeachlibrary.org.
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