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Dark Aura (A Carla Day Mystery) [Hardcover]

Diana O'Hehir (Author)
3.2 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (4 customer reviews)


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Book Description

A Carla Day Mystery December 4, 2007
New from the author of the highly acclaimed Murder Never Forgets.

With her genre-bending mix of literary and crime fiction, Diana O'Hehir again plots a mystery as intricate as the inner workings of the mind.

When an indigo child speaks, people listen. Allegedly radiating an unusual purplish glow, the extraordinary beings are mysterious and otherworldly. And when one of them, fifteen-yearold Tamina Kerry, falls off a ledge to her death, part-time Deputy Sheriff Carla Day investigates. Was her death an accident, suicide-or murder? Carla has experience with those who sometimes fall out of touch with reality, since her father, Professor Day, has early Alzheimer's. Like much of the town of Stanton Mills, California, he had befriended Tamina-but confused her with Ta-Ent, an ancient Egyptian mythical journeywoman among the dead. With her final breath, Tamina spoke of her baby, another indigo child-who had disappeared. Now Carla must rely on the word of a hysterical grandmother and a drug-addled young man claiming to be the baby's father-and search the recesses of her father's fading mind for whatever clues he can provide.

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Editorial Reviews

From Publishers Weekly

O'Hehir's engaging third mystery (after Erased from Memory) finds part-time deputy sheriff Carla Day facing a confusing case. In a California community peopled by aging hippies, prophesying teen Tamina Kerry has fallen to her death—or was she pushed? And what's the talk of babies with special indigo auras? When a man is found with his throat slit after Tamina's funeral, Carla knows she needs to find out fast. O'Hehir's spare prose and dab hand with character development render Carla intriguing and slightly remote; readers will plow eagerly through the story just to get to know her better. Her boss, sheriff Cherie Ghent, is also likable, a blonde fashion plate who manages those around her by playing dumb. Running alongside the crime-solving is Carla's intermittent affair with sweet-talking Rob (whom Cherie stole and then generously gave back) and her devotion to her father, who's losing his memory to Alzheimer's. Carla's filial care-giving balances the West Coast occultism and lends this whodunit emotional heft. (Dec.)
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

About the Author

Diana O'Hehir lives in Northern California with her husband. She is the Pulitzer Prize-nominated author of six books of poetry and two novels, and taught at Mills College, where she founded the Creative Writing Program. She has received several awards and an NEA grant.

Product Details

  • Hardcover: 288 pages
  • Publisher: Berkley Hardcover (December 4, 2007)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0425217531
  • ISBN-13: 978-0425217535
  • Product Dimensions: 8.4 x 5.5 x 1 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 4.8 ounces
  • Average Customer Review: 3.2 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (4 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #3,056,595 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Customer Reviews

4 Reviews
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Average Customer Review
3.2 out of 5 stars (4 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars Confused, unrealistic mystery, February 5, 2008
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This review is from: Dark Aura (A Carla Day Mystery) (Hardcover)
I really enjoyed the other two books in this series, but Carla Day seems to have gone off the deep end. The narrative voice is spacey. There are two murders in this book, and not a bit of evidence is collected. A part time sheriff's deputy, Carla spends time not working at her administrator's job in a sort of self-care facility, while she fumbles around asking questions about the two murders she's supposed to solve. She doesn't seem to have any training as a law enforcement professional, and doesn't seem to know how to investigate a murder or get cooperation from her suspects and witnesses. There doesn't seem to be any paperwork produced, evidence analyzed, or reporting done. Carla gets back with Rob the doctor, but the hospital scenes are no more convincing than the investigative scenes. I couldn't suspend my disbelief while reading this poorly written, confused story, which was solved by accident in the last ten pages. I expected better from this talented author.
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3.0 out of 5 stars was not to my taste, June 30, 2008
This review is from: Dark Aura (A Carla Day Mystery) (Hardcover)
This is the third and final installment in the series featuring Carla Day, a part-time Deputy Sheriff and full time problem solver for the adult care center where she and her father live. Stanton Mills, CA is a small town with aging hippies and new-agers, so crime isn't always a big problem, but when an indigo child, Tamina Kerry, ends up at the bottom of a cliff after a dark portent, the local sheriff feels quite obligated to investigate. Unfortunately for law enforcement most of the inhabitants of the quiet and reclusive community are quite leery of the police and won't speak freely around them. Since Carla and her father spend time in the community with friends, the sheriff assigns the case to Carla with the hopes that someone will come forward - and not pushing this time.

Carla is known to the community but is still an outsider. Her father, an aging, retired Egyptologist with Alzheimer's, has earned the respect of the locals but his condition is deteriorating quickly - making his information less than useful, despite his close friendship with the dead girl. What Carla does seem to come across is news of missing babies - just hints - but no one seems willing to confirm or deny the information for fear of retribution - like Tamina.

Carla didn't cut the mustard with me. Even though she was a reluctant deputy, she had to have received some investigative training - but you wouldn't know it after reading this novel. She has no outline of a crime or suspects, never remembers what she is looking for much less writing it down in a report or notes, and her search patterns and reasoning are non-existent. I know that amateurs have been modeled this way, but in this Carla is supposed to be considered a professional. I could see if this was supposed to blend into the community in some way, as the residents seem to be fairly laid-back and lackadaisical, but it doesn't.

Maybe the first two books make up for the third in the series, but I would never think to pick them up after reading this one. It, quite simply, was not to my taste. I enjoy most mysteries with something of a paranormal bent, which is what drew me to this one, but I am afraid I this was not one of them. Those who enjoy mysticism and Egyptology may enjoy some of the writings and background.
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5.0 out of 5 stars entertaining whodunit, December 7, 2007
This review is from: Dark Aura (A Carla Day Mystery) (Hardcover)
In Stanton's Mill, California many of the New Age residents believe in the prophecies foretold by the Indigo child, fifteen years old Tamina Kerry. Whenever Tamina spoke in her Oracle like metaphors, people heeded what she said. So everyone waited breathlessly for she has told them she has something significant to say.

However, before she can relay her message, Tamina falls off a nearby cliff to her death. In her last moment she mentions a missing Indigo child. Still no one thinks about it as the Indigo are strange and others like her have died young or vanished abruptly to never be seen again. Encouraged by her boss sly blonde bombshell Sheriff Cherie Ghent, part-time deputy sheriff Carla Day investigates whether Tamina's death was an accident, a suicide or a murder. She uses her skills honed from obtaining information from her Alzheimer's suffering father to inquire of the eccentrics who live there. When a man is found dead with his throat cut, Carla believes there is a link to the Tamina death and fears more will follow.

The key to this entertaining whodunit is the fullness of the prime characters especially the heroine, who works the case amidst an eccentric crowd that orates in riddles when asked a straight question. Her caring for her father, a professor losing his memory except when it comes to Egyptology, enables her to work through the odd responses she receives. Cherie is terrific as her boss as she plays the police version of Reese Witherspoon's Legally Blonde but more as a ploy to fool the rubes into giving her whatever she needs. Fans will appreciate Diana O'Hehir's enjoyable third mystery as no clues are straightforward. They require New Age translation into police English (see ERASED FROM MEMORY and MURDER NEVER FORGETS).

Harriet Klausner
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Inside This Book (learn more)
First Sentence:
"She's not going to die," I say. Read the first page
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
blue dog, indigo babies, indigo baby
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
Stanton's Mill, Diana O'Hehir, Happy Dawn, Anneliese Wertiger, Molly Littlefeather, Placer County, San Francisco, Del Oro County, Snoop Lady, Best Western, Molly Kinsolving, Ann Warner, Beau La Roche, Perfect Solutions, Santa Cruz, Crystal Facility, Gold Run Motel, Tamina Kerry, Tirza's List, Book of the Dead, Indigo Child
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