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Fine Night for Dying
 
 
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Fine Night for Dying [Large Print] [Hardcover]

Jack Higgins (Author)
4.2 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (4 customer reviews)


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Book Description

April 2007
Newly widowed Harriet MacIver has just taken on her first travel writing assignment–rating an adventure cruise in the Caribbean. Add a gaggle of college students on a mini semester-at-sea voyage, a rusting hulk of a ship that misses more ports than it makes, and two deaths by poisonous butterfly, and Harriet is off and running on a hair-raising adventure. And that’s before two coeds, Kate and Carly, go missing–Carly being her boss’s daughter.

Pulled into a dangerous web of bioethical intrigue, Harriet races against time. If the killer isn’t stopped, Kate and Carly will die–and that may only be the beginning of his plans for destruction.

With scant clues and fewer resources, Harriet must track down the college girls–and outmaneuver a murderer who is only part of an elaborate plot of medical madness. Travel writing certainly isn’t what Harriet thought it would be.

Spiked with suspense and bioethical intrigue, The Butterfly Farm invites you to solve a Caribbean puzzle with travel’s most delightful woman of mystery.
--This text refers to the Paperback edition.

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Editorial Reviews

Review

Praise for The Butterfly Farm


“Eerily recalling today’s headlines, Diane Noble spins a tale of innocent young women gone missing in exotic locales . . . and you will adore the heroine who makes it her business to solve the riddle of their disappearances. Harriet MacIver is a woman for our times, and The Butterfly Farm is a pulse-pounding adventure.
–Angela Hunt, author of Uncharted


“Diane Noble has created an intriguing mystery and delightful heroine in The Butterfly Farm.  Harriet is wise, intelligent, and compassionate, solving the crime with a spunky determination that kept me up way past my bedtime.  A terrific and versatile writer, Ms. Noble had me alternately laughing, holding my breath and cheering as Harriet followed God's leading when almost everyone else thought she was a bit barmy.  I can't wait for the next book!”
–Sharon Gillenwater, author of Twice Blessed and Standing Tall


“A masterpiece of fiction with cleverly arranged twists and turns from a most unique heroine.”
–DiAnn Mills, author of Leather and Lace and When the Lion Roars


“I want to be Harriett MacIver when I grow up! She’s a fresh, faith-filled and feisty heroine ready to take the mystery world by storm.”
–Lynn Bulock, author of the Gracie Lee mysteries and Less than Frank --This text refers to the Paperback edition.

About the Author

Diane Noble is the popular author of fourteen novels, including the award-winning The Last Storyteller and the critically acclaimed California Chronicles series. As Diane’s readers can attest, she creates page-turning stories–whether in the realm of historical fiction, romance, romantic suspense, or mysteries. Diane makes her home with husband, Tom, and their two spoiled cats in southern California. --This text refers to the Paperback edition.

Product Details

  • Hardcover: 239 pages
  • Publisher: Thorndike Press (April 2007)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0786294876
  • ISBN-13: 978-0786294879
  • Product Dimensions: 8.6 x 5.7 x 0.9 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 13.6 ounces
  • Average Customer Review: 4.2 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (4 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #4,218,373 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

More About the Author

Award-winning novelist Diane Noble spent most of her first eighteen years in a small mountain village in the High Sierra back country near Yosemite National Park. Growing up among towering pines and rushing waterfalls provided Diane a rich setting in which to let her vivid imagination soar. Her first novel was published in 1994 under the pseudonym Amanda MacLean with four more following in quick succession. She began writing under her own name in 1998, with the publication of one of her most popular works of historical fiction, THE VEIL. THE SISTER WIFE, book one of her new Brides of Gabriel series, is now in bookstores everywhere. Keep in touch with Diane at www.dianenoble.com, http://www.facebook.com/dianenoblebooks, and http://twitter.com/dianenoble.

 

Customer Reviews

4 Reviews
5 star:
 (1)
4 star:
 (3)
3 star:    (0)
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Average Customer Review
4.2 out of 5 stars (4 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews

7 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars terrific amateur sleuth thriller, June 24, 2006
Working for the San Francisco Town Crier magazine as a travel writer, widow Harriet McIver is sailing on the cruise ship Sun Spirit towards Costa Rica. Her boss asks Harriet to keep an eye on her niece, Carly Lowe, on the tour also as part of a student contingency from Sheperton College. When Carly fails to return to the vessel, no one except her roommate Zoe Shore and Harriet seem worried.

That night, passenger Harry Eason is found dead in a swimming pool with the deadly, if swallowed in large quantities, blue morpho butterfly nearby. Former SFPD Detective Adam Hartsfield is on board working a private investigation, but seems disinterested in the death though he tells Harriet that the victim was a sleuth who rescued youngsters from cults. As the vessel stops for time at a nearby health spa with a famous butterfly farm, Harriet knows something sinister has happened to Carly and plans to find and rescue the teen.

Though the suspense takes a while to get started, THE BUTTERFLY FARM is a terrific amateur sleuth thriller that once the accelerator is pressed takes off and never slows down until the final twist. Harriet is a noble protagonist, a West Coast Jessica Fletcher refusing to back down in spite of warnings especially from Adam and understanding how treacherous the situation is. The look at Costa Rica enhances a wonderful tale starring a heroine who not only keeps the plot focused, but deserves future travelogues for armchair mystery aficionados.

Harriet Klausner
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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Noble incorporates the repeating motif of the poisonous blue morpho butterfly throughout the book,, June 5, 2007
By 
FaithfulReader.com (New York, New York) - See all my reviews
In her first book in the Harriet MacIver Mystery series, veteran faith fiction novelist Diane Noble tackles a heady mix of murder and scientific research gone awry against the lush backdrop of Costa Rica.

The just-widowed Harriet MacIver is a brand new travel writer with a fear of flying and destined to be the next big thing in the travel world. Harriet doesn't go anywhere without her lumbering, 20-pound-plus scary feline named Gus (short for asparagus). When her assigning editor at the Town Crier newspaper sends her (and Gus) to cover a Costa Rican cruise on a rusty tub of a ship, the Sun Spirit, she's saddled with the dual task of keeping an eye on the editor's college-age daughter, Carly Lowe.

It's a long way from the glamorous assignment Harriet envisioned. A murder on board is a grim foreshadowing of what's to come. Things get nastier when Carly doesn't turn up after a trip ashore, and, as Harriet discovers, she's not the first girl to disappear in Costa Rica from Carly's Florida college. Then Kate Rivers, a classmate, also disappears. And their frumpy fellow student Zoë Shire seems to know more than she's telling.

Two rather dashing older men are on Harriet's radar screen: one a Nobel Prize contender for his scientific research (can you see what's coming here?) and another who has a checkered past and a poignant story. When the trail of the missing girls leads to a butterfly farm, Harriet must decide which man to trust. And if she makes the wrong choice, the consequences will be deadly.

Noble portrays Harriet MacIver as a cross between Dorothy Gilman's Mrs. Pollifax and Agatha Christie's Miss Marple. Christie's Miss Marple is fond of saying she learns everything she knows from observing life in a small English village; Harriet likes to point out that "Raising a family teaches you a lot about life, things like passion for what matters and stick-to-it-iveness to see a project through." Mrs. Pollifax is a previously depressed grandmotherly detective with a penchant for hats who travels the globe for the CIA; Harriet is a slightly depressed grandmotherly travel writer with a love for a ballcap (emblazoned with "You Go, Girl") who visits exotic locales as part of her work. Unlike Pollifax and Marple, however, MacIver flies airplanes and is up front and out there with her Christian faith.

Noble incorporates the repeating motif of the poisonous blue morpho butterfly throughout the book, which is a great touch mystery aficionados will appreciate. However, the reader is required to suspend disbelief on several plot points --- that the disappearing popular and attractive girls from the same college would all share a common blood type and genetic markers, just for starters. There are some lovely passages ("Ribbons of gray mist and fog clung to the dark water") but the story could have benefited from a good tightening of at least 50 pages, if not more, and the action slows in places.

Yet it's always refreshing to have the central character be closer to senior citizen than twenty-something, and the interesting details, nice rapport between the college students and Harriet, and current interest in stem cell research (Noble never really states a definitive position on this, by the way) will appeal to many mystery readers. Fans of Noble's previous books, including THE STORYTELLER and her California Chronicles trilogy, should enjoy this one.

--- Reviewed by Cindy Crosby
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Well-written, but not really a who-done-it, November 29, 2009
By 
Debbie (Harrison, AR United States) - See all my reviews
(TOP 1000 REVIEWER)   
"The Butterfly Farm" is a Christian mystery novel about discovering the whereabouts of several kidnapped girls. For the reader, it's not so much figuring out who did it or how but in seeing how Harriet MacIver will figure it out. The clues were very obvious, and (this was a group read) all three of us readers had the "who done it" and why figured out long before Harriet did.

I found Harriet's personality and lack of cleverness rather frustrating, but this wasn't due to lack of good writing. The novel was well-written, with excellent world-building, interesting and complex characters, and very good pacing and suspense. We eagerly kept reading because we wanted to know how Harriet solved the mystery.

The "problem" was that Harriet was naive and very trusting of even those she suspected might be bad guys. I wanted to shake some sense into her (though I'm not sure how shaking helps) every time she told important, life-or-death secrets to people she suspected might be bad guys just because she saw some good in them and they offered to help. If she was a young woman, I'd be more willing to accept and even enjoy this character trait, but she's old enough to have adult kids and so I expected her to have a bit more discernment.

My other disappointment was the Christian content. It annoyed me that every time Harriet was about to do something illegal and/or very foolish (due to not thinking out the consequences), she'd pray to God to help her get away with it. This wasn't being presented as something one ought to do or even that it helped her, but I was frustrated that she never realized what she was doing. She also seemed to think she wasn't breaking the law simply because she did it to help other people.

Though the novel was not preachy, there were enough prayers and Christian talk that non-Christians probably wouldn't enjoy it.

There was no sex. There was a very minor amount of bad language. This mystery novel would probably appeal most to those who don't mind somewhat-bumbling amateur detectives and don't primarily read mysteries for the challenge of figuring out who-done-it. Overall, the novel was well-written, clean reading.


Reviewed by Debbie from Genre Reviews (genrereviews. blogspot. com)
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