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Cold and Pure and Very Dead: A Karen Pelletier Mystery [Hardcover]

Joanne Dobson (Author)
4.7 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (6 customer reviews)


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Book Description

December 26, 2000
English professor Karen Pelletier is well known for her provocative manner and iconoclastic opinions, so it's no surprise that she perversely cites a commercial novel from the 1950s when asked to named the greatest book of the twentieth century. The only work by Mildred Deakin, who disappeared from public view shortly after its publication, Satan Mills quickly becomes the hottest book around. It's the center of contentious arguments in academic circles, climbs onto The New York Times bestseller list, and receives the coveted honor of being an Oprah Book Club selection. At the height of the frenzy, a reporter who discovers the reclusive author in rural upstate New York is found dead in her driveway. Could Deakin have been so protective of her privacy that she'd shoot someone to protect it?

Called in to help with the investigation, Karen learns that the scandalous happenings at the heart of Satan Mills were more autobiographical than its attractive young author wanted anyone to know. The intrepid professor deploys all her literary and investigative skills in an all-out effort to exonerate the embattled older woman and restore her peaceful existence. Detailed with Dobson's lethally witty pen, Karen's latest adventure is at once a deftly told mystery and a delightful debunking of polemical academics and pretentious intellectual windbags.



Editorial Reviews

Amazon.com Review

Karen Pelletier, assistant professor of English at prestigious Enfield College in Massachusetts, has opened a can of 44-year-old worms by telling New York Times writer Marty Katz that, in her opinion, Oblivion Falls was the greatest literary work of the past century.

Like Grace Metalious's 1956 cause célèbre, Peyton Place, Oblivion Falls blew the steamy lid off a respectable New England college town, made ground-breaking strides up the bestseller lists, and made a brilliant if briefly lit star of its author, the now reclusive Mildred Deakin. And now, thanks to Pelletier's intentionally provocative throwaway answer to a snooty writer's question, Oblivion Falls is back in the limelight: an Oprah's Book Club selection, at the top of the Times bestseller list, and one of Amazon.com's top 10. None of which explains why Marty Katz was found in the driveway of goat farmer Milly Finch, shot dead by a 30-30 Winchester.

"Re-e-e-ally?'" This was strange, even tragic, but so far I couldn't see any "circumstances" that linked the killing to me. "That's too bad," I said, then added, inanely, "he wrote so well."

"Did he?" the pale lieutenant asked, and exchanged another significant look with her subordinate. "Well, so did she, obviously. Write well, I mean. We haven't released this information to the general public yet, Professor, but a long time ago Milly Finch was a famous novelist. She published under the name of Mildred Deakin."

And with that, Pelletier and her longtime partner-in-solving-crime, Massachusetts State Police Lieutenant Charlie Piotrowski, are off. Nicely paced, plotted, and peopled with distractions romantic and decidedly otherwise (from campus newcomers Jake Fenton, the roguish author-in-residence, and Ralph Emerson Brooke, the fifties hipster sitting uneasily in the endowed Chair of Literary Studies, to the well-limned Milly Finch herself), this fourth entry in the Pelletier series may please newcomers most. Good as this is, Dobson's regulars have come to expect even more from Professor Pelletier. --Michael Hudson

From Publishers Weekly

Despite a promising premise, this latest Karen Pelletier mystery is more academic than smart. Pelletier, associate professor of English at prestigious Enfield College, causes a sensation by telling reporter Marty Katz that the best novel of the 20th century is Mildred Deakin's Oblivion Falls, a controversial and once-popular '50s potboiler of youthful sex and death. After Pelletier's quote appears in the New York Times, Oblivion Falls becomes an Oprah book and shoots to the top of the Times bestseller list. Deakin disappeared soon after the novel's publication; Katz spies a story and begins digging into the past. His untimely death on Deakin's doorstep in upstate New York thrusts the author (now a goat farmer) back into the limelight as the prime suspect in Katz's murder. Pelletier, who feels guilty for starting the chain of events that led to the murder, investigates. The three previous Pelletier novels (Agatha-nominated Quieter Than Sleep, etc.) have an easy, conversational tone and a sassy, engaging heroine. Unfortunately, the series seems to have run out of steam. The secondary characters have become easily recognizable stereotypes; the soft-boiled plot is formulaic and bland. The predictable confrontation between Pelletier and the two-dimensional murderer at the climax falls exceptionally flat. Agent, Deborah Schneider. (Dec. 26) Forecast: More outings like this one could threaten Karen Pelletier's shot at tenure in the mystery world. While fans of Dobson's previous novels will buy this one, most of them will be disappointed.
Copyright 2000 Reed Business Information, Inc.

Product Details

  • Hardcover: 272 pages
  • Publisher: Doubleday; 1st edition (December 26, 2000)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0385493401
  • ISBN-13: 978-0385493406
  • Product Dimensions: 9.3 x 6.3 x 1 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1.1 pounds
  • Average Customer Review: 4.7 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (6 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #2,246,877 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

More About the Author

Wearing my creative hat (as distinct from my scholar's mortarboard),I am the author of the Professor Karen Pelletier academic mystery novels. In both my fiction and my scholarly work on 19th-century American women writers, I am fascinated with the past. Maybe that's because I sometimes feel as if I have lived in three different centuries. Born in New York City in the middle of the 20th-century, I spent all my summers at my grandmother's remote, 19th-century non-electrified home in northern New Brunswick, Canada, carrying wood for the stove, pumping water for the laundry, each morning disposing of the unmentionable contents of something I thought was spelled "p-o-e," but was really spelled "p-o-t" (as in chamber ...)and pronounced in the French manner for reasons of discretion. Now, in the 21st century, I am writing novels whose mysteries are often based in the past. DEATH WITHOUT TENURE is the most recent, published by Poisoned Pen Press in January 2010.

 

Customer Reviews

6 Reviews
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Average Customer Review
4.7 out of 5 stars (6 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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7 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Good mystery, great characters, February 3, 2001
This review is from: Cold and Pure and Very Dead: A Karen Pelletier Mystery (Hardcover)
College Professor Karen Pelletier sets off a whirlwind when she nominates Obsession Falls, a 1950s sex novel, as book of the century. Before the excitement dies, a reporter tracking down the author is killed and the author accused. Karen doesn't believe the evidence and investigates. Could the mostly forgotten (until Karen reminds the world of its existance) semi-autobiographical novel bare secrets someone didn't want exposed?

Author Joanne Dobson does an excellent job describing Karen's working environment: the strange relationship between faculty and departmental secretary, and the infighting and semi-friendships amongst professors jealous of one another's success. More importantly, she gives Karen a history--broken loves, a family to whom she cannot go back, a daughter now grown and moving out on her own, and all of the little fears that make a person fully human. Once she makes us love Karen, Dobson throws her into danger. How can we help our response? (Answer, we can't--just sit back and enjoy it).

You may guess the killer fairly early but you'll want to stay with the novel to make sure Karen survives and to see how she uncovers the truth.

Highly recommended.

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7 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Dobson should be more popular, January 23, 2001
By 
This review is from: Cold and Pure and Very Dead: A Karen Pelletier Mystery (Hardcover)
The mix of academic world and mystery--with high-brow elements and down-to-earth humor--in her Karen Pelletier stories should be compelling more readers toward Joanne Dobson. I discovered these mysteries after searching for something with a central female character and experiencing great disappointment from some other, better-selling authors. This is one of Dobson's best!
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7 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Solid entertainment, February 15, 2001
This review is from: Cold and Pure and Very Dead: A Karen Pelletier Mystery (Hardcover)
Have you read Peyton Place? If so, you will particularly enjoy
Dobson's take on the (by today's standards) mild expose of
small-town sex and scandal and Professor Karen Pelletier's involvement
in the book's resurrection (and its author's incarceration).

If the
series were only concerned with Pelletier's sleuthing skills, I never
would have made it through the first (let alone the fourth)
book. Dobson's real talent is in presenting a genuinely likeable
character who has a great job, fun friends, and intriguing
possibilities for her personal life. Karen Pelletier is such a
compelling character that the reader forgives the occasional bit of
sloppy writing and the contrived plot devices that pepper the
series.

The Karen Pelletier mysteries are as addictive as
movie-theater popcorn. If you like them, try the Kate Fansler
mysteries by Amanda Cross (which set the standard for this genre),
Veronica Stallwood's Kate Ivory novels, and Edith Skom's Beth Austin
novels. I've recently discovered but not yet had the time to read two
other authors in this genre: Carole Bugge and J.S. Borthwick.

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Inside This Book (learn more)
First Sentence:
So, Professor Pelletier, what do you think is the best novel of the twentieth century?" Read the first page
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
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Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
Mildred Deakin, Jake Fenton, Milly Finch, Oblivion Falls, New York, Marty Katz, Ralph Brooke, Nelson Corners, English Department, Lolita Lapierre, Enfield College, Milly Deakin, Jim Finch, New Hampshire, George Gilman, Joe Rizzo, Martin Katz, New England, Sean Small, Andrew Prentiss, Charlie Piotrowski, Evelyn Sackela, Columbia County, Lieutenant Syverson, Stallmouth College
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