From Publishers Weekly
Starred Review. Holy Hollywood! In actor-turned-author Kozak's witty third crime caper (after 2005's Dating Is Murder), wild Wollie Shelley must solve the cold-blooded murder of terminally ill David Zetrakis, producer of the popular TV soap At the End of the Day. Tall, unarmed and sometimes very dangerous if provoked, Wollie's an underemployed greeting card artist who starts moonlighting as the dating correspondent for the talk show SoapDirt. Getting the dirt on David's killer, however, proves to be a major challenge. Wollie and her best friend, fellow Day actress Joey Rafferty, had both dated David, and Joey becomes the LAPD's top suspect when it turns out David bequeathed her a valuable Gustav Klimt painting. Wollie's faith in her friend is further tested when Joey's husband dies in a suspicious surfing accident and Joey disappears. A Greek mythology twist and crackling insider insight into the fascinating soap opera world enhance this clever whodunit. (Aug.)
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Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
From Booklist
Kozak's third mystery starring greeting-card designer and muralist Wollie Shelley delivers an enjoyable mix of melodrama and mirth. This time around, Wollie helps investigate the death of a beloved soap-opera producer who is also one her former beaux. Chief among the suspects is her best gal pal, Joey, a onetime soap-opera actress inclined to promiscuity and illegal substances--but not, Wollie is convinced, murder. Meanwhile, Wollie signs on as dating correspondent for the tabloid TV show SoapDirt, a decision her possessive FBI agent boyfriend is none too happy about. Kozak (Dating Is Murder, 2005) has appeared in feature films and on the soap opera The Guiding Light; her keen insight into show business adds sass and spice to this Agatha, Anthony, and Macavity award-winning series. She vividly evokes a world where seemingly innocuous missteps (a bad dye job, for example) can get folks into a lather. Fans of Jennifer Crusie's heroines are sure to like witty, well-meaning Wollie, who plays like a less-cynical version of Janet Evanovich's Stephanie Plum. Allison Block
Copyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved
Copyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved


