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5 Reviews
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52 of 52 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Bloody Kin is right!,
By Bettye McKee (Fort Smith, AR USA) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Bloody Kin (Mass Market Paperback)
Margaret Maron is a great storyteller, and although she has written a series based in New York, North Carolina appears to be where her heart is. Although Deborah Knott does not appear in "Bloody Kin," we get a different, more family-oriented view of Dwight Bryant, so we feel that we are on familiar ground. Our heroine, Kate, is portrayed as a woman determined to make a place for herself in a strange land after her husband, Jake, is killed, and she does so admirably. Jake's family members, however, the few that are still alive, are not helpful in this regard. The child is a welcome ray of sunshine in an otherwise dismal situation, and Kate establishes a wonderful rapport with her. Another reviewer was apparently horrified that Kate smoked during her pregnancy; on the other hand, the story takes place in the very heart of tobacco country, and I was more impressed by how little she smoked. As a story that stands apart from both the Sigrid Harrald series and the Deborah Knott stories, "Bloody Kin" is a fine read.
6 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Transition from New York to North Carolina,
By
This review is from: Bloody Kin (Mass Market Paperback)
BLOODY KIN is a transition novel as Margaret Maron moves from New York to North Carolina. It gives the reader a look at Dwight Bryant and his family before the opening of the Deborah Knott series.An excellent read, as Kate Honeycutt moves from New York to live on the farm owned by her deceased husband, Jake. His great-uncle is worried that Kate will evict him from the only home he has ever know and makes her new living arrangements as difficult as possible. But Jake's death was not an accident as Kate soon learns after discovering the body of one of Jake's war buddies in the cellar of the building she plans to use as a studio. Now someone wants Kate dead before Dwight Bryant can discover the truth behind the killings. Nash Black, author of WRITING AS A SMALL BUSINESS.
8 of 12 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Even without Judge Knott, Colleton County is Dangerous,
By Moe811 (New York USA) - See all my reviews
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: Bloody Kin (Mass Market Paperback)
In this novel, the main characters are not the Knott family, but Dwight is still around to solve the mystery. Kate inherits her husband's homeplace after his murder, but his murder isn't the only murder or the only mystery.
5.0 out of 5 stars
Bloody Kin,
By
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: Bloody Kin (Mass Market Paperback)
Bloody Kin is a very good book, but I guess I'm too used to Deborah Knott and her family. I missed them. But it is a good background leading to the other books in the series. Margaret Maron is one of my favorite authors, and I'm collecting all of her Deborah Knott books. Bloody Kin is well written, and there's a lot of mystery, which I love. I try to guess the ending of all the books I read, but it is impossible with the Margaret Maron books. I'm always wrong. I thoroughly enjoyed this book.
16 of 31 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars
Great setting, but protagonist not a great role model,
By A Customer
This review is from: Bloody Kin (Mass Market Paperback)
As a fan of Margaret Maron's Deborah Knott series, I looked forward to this book set in the same area. Kate was a fairly well-developed character, and it was interesting to see deputy Dwight Bryant in a light other than with Knott. The glimpses of her design work were good details to include, and it further developed the setting of the novel. Of all of Maron's writing assets, setting has to be one of her best. Throughout this book, I was horrified to read about the main character smoking as well as drinking alcohol while pregnant . An otherwise intelligent, pleasant character, Kate was marred by these habits, and the reader goes away from the book respecting her less. Believability may have been what Maron was after, or realism, but she could have found more constructive ways to get to the same end. In all, the book was an enjoyable read, and I still look forward to more of the Colleton County conundrums.
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Bloody Kin by Margaret Maron (Mass Market Paperback - 1985)
Used & New from: $19.95
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