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9 of 9 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Who killed de judge? Everybody has a motive., July 9, 1998
In the second of her series involving crime beat reporter Hollis Ball, and her ghostly ex-husband, Sam Westcott, Chappell takes a sardonic look at both the court system and the colletor's mania that surrounds carved decoys. When a judge is beaned with a priceless decoy, the first question on every carver and colletor's lips is, "It didn't hurt the decoy did it?" Hollis, of course has taken quite an interest in the dead judge herself, since she covered the trial where the opinionated jurist gave a wife killer a six-month sentence. Though Hollis feels the judge got no more than justice, she agrees to look into the puzzle when a home town boy is accused. And Hollis has her hands full. Besides the usual suspects, every lawyer who ever plead a case before him wanted the judge dead. Hollis' dead husband, Sam, steps in to keep her safe -- his mission in death, once more. Hip deep in carvers, collectors, and lawyers, not to mention the former fiance of her "almost" boyfriend Officer Ormand Friendly, Hollis ends up as close to death as she is to the truth. As a former reporter who covered the crime beat on a small town daily, and one who knows how to play Tonk, I have to say that Chappell, her well sanded wit and appreciation for the ridiculous side of the news business, is in rare form with this one.
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5.0 out of 5 stars
Terrific Eastern Shore series!!, June 3, 2005
Of the four Maryland series that I am familiar with (Laura Lippman's Tess Monaghan, Tim Cockey's Hitchcock Sewell, and Barbara Lee's Eve Elliott, being the others), this is easily my favorite.
A book with a ghost as a continuing major character could be unfortunately twee, but in Helen Chappell's hands it is sardonically funny. Chappell manages to make this all seem reasonable. Hollis Ball is an engaging character and it is a pleasure to spend time with her. The books' humor about various follies of humankind, fanatic collectors featuring in this volume, are extremely amusing.
The book has a very strong sense of place - my branch of the family moved away from the Eastern Shore a couple of generations ago, so I can't pose as an expert, but certainly the local views of what Chappell calls the 3Rs, rich retired Republicans, are dead on. How clannish are the old Eastern shore families? Well, my great-aunt and uncle moved from Chestertown to Easton (both on the Eastern shore) shortly after their marriage. My aunt told my mother that after 55 years in Easton, she felt that they had almost been accepted. On the other hand, when my parents retired to the Eastern shore, they did find that their connections made them somewhat more acceptable.
Two points that might be considered a weakness. Chappell introduces an African-American States Attorney, but she really doesn't have local Blacks as characters. Discussing race can get touchy - such a minefield that I'm not sure that I can really fault Chappell for not getting into it in a book that is intended to be light. I'm not sure how realistic it would be in this case - the de facto separation in some places can be a really strong barrier.
The other is a pet peeve: Chappell keeps referring to the local upper strata as WASPS, Aryans, rich Protestants, etc. People tend to use WASP as if the "W" stood for wealthy, but in fact it stands for "white". Aren't the Balls WASPS? There are a fair number of WASCs in Maryland, since it was founded to serve as a haven for English Catholics, but the Balls are Methodist. Aren't most white people on the Eastern Shore "Aryan" and Protestant? I myself am a half-WASP, if you use the word strictly and a whole-WASP in the loose sense, and I get very tired of people using WASP to imply boring, complacent and rich.
Well, tantrum over. I have found the two books that I have read very enjoyable, and I hope that the series will continue.
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1 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars
Duck soup, anyone?, September 16, 2001
By A Customer
It is indeed unfortunate that the books in this series are going out of print so soon after being published. It is an excellent series which deserves to be remembered. It is too bad Hollis is being better developed as a character than her husband's ghost is. Helen's readers deserve very well rounded and complete characters who are worth their effort to read about and who are capable of not only carrying on delightful conversations, but who are constantly doing the unexpected as well. And it is also too bad that pointing out the fallacies of the newspaper business on a regular basis aren't being given the attention they deserve. Helen is trying her best to present this in a witty and sardonic manner but she doesn't always succeed. This can be done without detracting from the mystery at all but apparently Helen isn't up to the challenge.
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