- Hardcover: 224 pages
- Publisher: Robert Hale Ltd (March 31, 2005)
- Language: English
- ISBN-10: 0709076835
- ISBN-13: 978-0709076834
- Shipping Weight: 1 pounds
- Average Customer Review: 3.5 out of 5 stars See all reviews (11 customer reviews)
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
11 of 12 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars
Narrow Vision, Boring Book,
By A Customer
This review is from: The Body in the Lighthouse: A Faith Fairchild Mystery (Faith Fairchild Mysteries) (Mass Market Paperback)
I guess I don't much care for Faith Fairchild. It got a little tiresome to be reminded 10 times how slender the heroine (usually a stand-in for the author) is. Okay, okay, so you're thin! Congratulations! It got even more tiresome that her reaction to anyone with any kind of social concern was to parody or shun them as "lunatics" or "terrorists" (terrorists?!). Faith's vision and concern never extends beyond her family, except for helping out with the Concord Players (sorry, Sanpere Players). She's as eager as the "ecoterrorists" to pull up the drawbridge and let no one else settle in Sanpere, yet doesn't recognize her own hypocrisy. Her view of life was summed up, for me, in her belief that her family was entitled to first refusal on a plot of land owned by someone else, destined to be sold to someone else, simply because her family enjoyed looking at it. This was my first Faith Fairchild mystery: I don't plan to bother with another.
6 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Well written, engaging mystery,
By
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: The Body in the Lighthouse: A Faith Fairchild Mystery (Faith Fairchild Mysteries) (Hardcover)
This is the thirteenth novel in the Faith Fairchild series, and Katherine Hall Page continues to provide a fine reading experience. Unlike some other long running series, Page's writing continues to be clear, consistent, and the story lines and characters remain congruent. The Body in the Lighthouse finds Faith and her family at the summer vacation home in Maine. While waiting for renovations on the home to be completed, the Fairchild family moves in temporarily with the mother of Faith's best friend Pix. This creates the setting for Faith to gain understanding of and empathy with the long-term residents of the town and their slow loss of their property and livelihoods to summer residents and newcomers building "MacMansions." The unrest in the town is also portrayed through a quarrel between families over lobster traps, a local play that puts a spotlight on the unknown talents of some residents, and a Romeo & Juliet type love story. As in the other stories in the series, Faith's family life runs in parallel to these activities and the crimes in the town. Well written and contemporary without relying on undue violence or profanity, The Body in the Lighthouse is an enjoyable read. Although the final conclusion will not be a surprise to most readers, it is satisfyingly consistent with the story line and human nature.
5 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars
glacially slow until near the end,
By
This review is from: The Body in the Lighthouse: A Faith Fairchild Mystery (Faith Fairchild Mysteries) (Hardcover)
There are only two reasons to stick with this slow-moving story to its end: (1)you enjoy reading page after page of household and shopping trivia about upper middle class families who can afford vacation homes, or (2) you're curious to see if any real action ever takes place. There is no tension in the first half of the book; no suspense, no real mystery. The action is concentrated at the end. The author employs a tactic used too often in female-centered mysteries; the murderer behaves like a gentleman the first time the protagonist gets too nosy, bopping her on the head but then delivering her unconscious body to her home. That behavior truly requires suspension of disbelief. Male readers in particular are likely to find the story terminally boring.
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