- Paperback
- Publisher: St. Martin's Minotaur (2004)
- ASIN: B000OTMPMS
- Average Customer Review: 4.9 out of 5 stars See all reviews (9 customer reviews)
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Talton does it again,
By
This review is from: Dry Heat: A David Mapstone Mystery (David Mapstone Mysteries) (Hardcover)
Mapstone is at his intellectual and deep-feeling best in Talton's third David Mapstone mystery, DRY HEAT. The dialogue is pure Talton -- witty, gritty and insightful. The story is another sophisticated tale of Mapstone, a history professor turned sheriff's deputy, taking on crime in the blistering heat of Phoenix, this time with his wife, Lindsey, whose life is in danger because of some Russian mafia-busting she's done.
As usual, Talton's strong sense of place and history make this a book even non-mystery buffs like me love. Anyone who believes Phoenix is a Shangri-la of swimming pools and merely "dry heat" will appreciate Mapstone's nuanced view of the sprawling city as an "acquired taste." The book's cadence is peppered with fresh turns of phrase, such as Mapstone's contention that con artists, misfits and other "rough-hewn faces" end up in Phoenix, "as if the city is the last fence line catching the unattached debris of a windy world." Thanks for another one, Mapstone and Talton.
3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Dry Heat,
By
This review is from: Dry Heat: A David Mapstone Mystery (David Mapstone Mysteries) (Hardcover)
David Mapstone and his wife Lindsay are a delightful pair of crime solvers: David because he really doesn't want to be but can't refuse the order of the Sheriff to work a long-dead case, and Lindsay because her life is in serious jeopardy if they don't solve the case soon. It's also great to read about a couple that are not romanticized but are definitely committed to each other.
The reason these books are so appealing is that the author Jon Talton makes such wonderful, insightful and downright derogatory comments about Phoenix that are SO true! It is a city without a soul. Talton's style is clean, clear, and the plots are complex enough to keep the reader going.
3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
fine "History Shamus" tale,
This review is from: Dry Heat: A David Mapstone Mystery (David Mapstone Mysteries) (Hardcover)
Having a homeless person die is no big deal anywhere in this country. However, having a homeless person die with an FBI's badge sewn into his pocket raises eyebrows. When that badge found on the John Doe belonged to Agent John Pilgrim murdered in 1948, nothing makes sense.
The FBI asks Maricopa County, Arizona Deputy s David Mapstone to help on the case because he brings a unique perspective to an investigation. A former San Diego State University Professor of History, David looks at clues from the viewpoint of a historian sifting through information. The Feds believe that point of view might explain how a badge lost over fifty years ago surfaced on a dead; ironically the FBI fails to cooperate when it comes to providing full information on the long dead agent. However David has other concerns involving his wife Lindsey; a computer whiz, she several others cracked a case involving the Russian mafia; now three members of her team have been assassinated. As the Mapstones struggle to stay alive, the professor begins solving the current spin of the cold case homicide. The third "History Shamus" tale is an intriguing mystery especially when David works the cold case with little cooperation from the FBI, who wants to restrict his investigation to how the homeless person got the badge. His work also puts him in professional conflict with the Cold Case Squad. The sidebar involving his spouse adds suspense and ultimately ties back to the prime theme, but can be distracting until the reader sees the links. DRY HEAT is a terrific entry in a fine unique police procedural (see CAMELBACK FALLS and CONCRETE DESERT for the previous novels). Harriet Klausner
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