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179 of 180 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Creative, sensitive and totally engrossing mystery
Derek Mason isn't different from many other gay men in San Francisco, working at a "dot-com" and sharing a small apartment with a sarcastic, anorexic straight female roommate and a diva-ish cat. His background isn't different from many either, having sought a new life in California after severing ties with his fundamentalist Southern family (by mutual agreement, after he...
Published on November 20, 2004 by Bob Lind

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23 of 31 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars Thin
I hate to sound a negative note among all the enthusiastic reviewers here, but I just didn't find this book very enjoyable and had to struggle to finish it (fortunately it's pretty short). The main character is colorless, to put it mildly (perhaps he seemed especially so because I just finished a book by Rick Copp, whose protagonist is particularly interesting), the...
Published on July 1, 2005 by Phelps Gates


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179 of 180 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Creative, sensitive and totally engrossing mystery, November 20, 2004
By 
Bob Lind "camelwest" (Phoenix, AZ United States) - See all my reviews
(TOP 1000 REVIEWER)   
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This review is from: Fingering The Family Jewels (Paperback)
Derek Mason isn't different from many other gay men in San Francisco, working at a "dot-com" and sharing a small apartment with a sarcastic, anorexic straight female roommate and a diva-ish cat. His background isn't different from many either, having sought a new life in California after severing ties with his fundamentalist Southern family (by mutual agreement, after he "came out" to them as gay).

But the story begins eight years later, when he has an unexpected reunion he has with that family, in Charlotte, North Carolina, when he returns for the funeral of his favorite Aunt Walterene. Derek quickly faces the same bigotry and status-seeking hypocrisy in most of the members of his family, especially his mother Gladys and his uncle Vernon, who is running for the Senate. His refuge is the house of his Aunt Ruby, who was Walterene's life partner, and his unmarried older sister Valerie. Derek also gets to spend some time with his older cousin Mark (Vernon's son), who was his first lover, before Mark decided he needed to "play it straight" and get married, in order to achieve success in the family's huge construction business.

In helping Ruby sort through Walterene's belongings, Derek comes across her girlhood diary, where she suggests that the reported lynching by the Klu Klux Klan of a black former family employee may have actually been done by Vernon and his father, over reports that the man had mollested Gladys as a girl. When a newspaper reporter picks up on the fact that Vernon Harris has a gay nephew, it becomes a political embarassment to the conservative "traditional values" candidate, and Derek is urged to leave town. Deciding to stay to help Ruby for a while, he becomes the target of a mysterious raspy-voiced assailant who tries to scare him out of town, which he believes may be related to his asking around concerning the lynching.

"Fingering the Family Jewels" is a captivating, sexy, fast-paced and extremely creative mystery, exposing how greed and misplaced family loyalties can result in a pattern of lies, deceit, incest and possibly murder. Author Greg Lilly, previously a writer of short stories who has a background as a technical analyst (and worked at a family-owned company that provided the inspiration for this first novel), hits a home-run with this intelligent, sensitive and highly engrossing masterpiece. Much recommended!
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52 of 58 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars More Please!, September 15, 2004
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This review is from: Fingering The Family Jewels (Paperback)
It is a pleasure reading "Fingering the Family Jewels". Drama, mystery, romance, "Fingering the Family Jewels" is thrilling and absorbing. To top it all Lilly has created a great protagonist in Derek Mason. Sensitive, smart, romantic at heart and of course gay, this young man is immensely likable and one only wish the best for him. Only 196 pages but Lilly does not need more to tell a great story. The cover says "A Derek Mason Mystery" and I hope that means there is more to come.
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35 of 38 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A Southern Jewel, July 18, 2005
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This review is from: Fingering The Family Jewels (Paperback)
Fingering the Family Jewels by Greg Lilly is an engaging and very well written tale of family strife. Unlike other books written in the first person, Lilly's peripheral characters-- richly written to perfection in their true southern style-don't constantly drag the reader's attention away from the observant protagonist, Derek Mason. He has our full attention throughout Lilly's first novel in the Derek Mason Mystery series.

Derek returns to his hometown, Charlotte, North Carolina, to attend the funeral of his beloved Aunt Walterine. It's his first trip home in the seven years since his mother, who Derek refers to as Gladys the Bitch, sent him out of state to attend school, apparently because he was gay, therefore avoiding Charlotte's premier family from embarrassment among the city's elite. But, was that really the reason she sent Derek away?

Once back home, Derek discovers a deeply hidden family secret, one that would dash his conservative uncle's senatorial aspirations. He believes his ignorant, homophobic uncle is unfit to represent the voters of North Carolina. The secret Derek uncovers, with the help of handsome reporter and love interest, Daniel, has far more serious implications than loosing one election.

Greg Lilly's portrayal of the elite southern family is realistic and believable. As is the case with many powerful families, their shenanigans often read like a soap opera. The Harris clan keeps everything to themselves--their secrets and perhaps even their genes.

From page one, Fingering the Family Jewels is a thoroughly engaging read. Lilly leads the reader right smack into the thick of the plot and doesn't let up until the last page. I anxiously await the second installment in this new mystery series by Greg Lilly.
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24 of 26 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A Gem, January 16, 2005
This review is from: Fingering The Family Jewels (Paperback)
Starting with a very clever title, and despite some really hackneyed plot devices, "Fingering the Family Jewels" is a great quick read, perfect for an afternoon at the beach or a transcon flight. Derek Mason, a gay man living in San Francisco (where else?), returns to his family in North Carolina where a conveniently discovered diary (how many times has this been used?)implicates his Uncle Vernon (stereotyped Southern redneck bigot) who is the father of Derek's first lover, Mark Harris. (An interesting choice for a name. Can it be that the author has never heard of Martha Raye?) Many readers will dislike the Mark character for his duplicitous life but that didn't bother me. What did bother me is that Mark started diddling Derek when Mark was 19 and Derek was 14, a blatant case of child molestation. The author could have made the two boys closer in age without at all compromising their relationship or the story. There's also an algebra quiz buried in the text. If their relationship lasted for four years and eight years have lapsed since it ended, how old is each man now? I get a different answer than the author. Still, Greg Lilly shows real talent at describing characters, particularly the little old lady types who come across as brash and interesting. A big surprise is sprung at the end which, as other reviewers have noted, makes one anxious for further exploration in future stories featuring these characters.
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26 of 30 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Go East, Young Man (and then South), September 11, 2005
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This review is from: Fingering The Family Jewels (Paperback)
Before I say more, let me say right away I enjoyed this book very much. Now---I have to say I am not sure why! The protagonist, Derek Mason, leaves San Francisco to attend the funeral of a relative in Charlotte, NC. And soon the serene surface of Charlotte is ruffled as things begin to "happen" to Derek. He is a likeable and even admirable young man so attractive to read about. We wish him only the best. But his quick temper and lack of real judgement get him into unnecessary trouble again and again. Surely, the reader wonders, he cannot be that dense! He is quickly in bed (literally) with two different people (whatever happened to discernment?)and one wonders about his stability. Still, that all said, it is a good read, and even has some surprises in store for the reader which are not easy to see coming. I hope that there is another Derek Mason adventure and that he can make up his mind and at the same time, find some maturity so that he can deal with happiness.
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13 of 14 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars What a family!, August 22, 2004
This review is from: Fingering The Family Jewels (Paperback)
This really unputdownable book is about 26 year old Derek Mason who returns home in his North Carolina hometown from which he was abandoned by his mother when in a stress situation revealing he was gay seven years ago after his lover, five years older cousin Mark left him. Quite succesful with a computer firm and very likable and attractive he comes home to find out that despite he thought about a lot of despise at his - really large, I soon lost overview about all the nephews, grandmas and siblings! - family there were quite a lot who still have friendly feelings to him. Especially interesting ... ahem ... was that married Mark was not exactly uninterested in reliving some of their better moments from childhood (Derek was 14 when their relationship started but that was not nearly one of the more scandalous secrets in the wealthy and influential Mason/Harris family). The thing with Mark got all the more interesting when hunky reporter Daniel shows interest in Derek and I really enjoyed this triangle a lot with Dereks suspicions if Mark knew Daniel better and things. Oh, by the way, there is also kind of a mystery in there and some very dramatic moments but in the end the family struggles are far more criminal than everything other. I hope this gives you an impression about the book and I can only recommend it. There is a second novel in the work and I definitely hope it is a sequel about Derek Mason.
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14 of 16 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars What a treat!, May 31, 2004
This review is from: Fingering The Family Jewels (Paperback)
When Derek Mason comes home to grieve his aunt's death (and to give some grief to other family members!) he knows how twisted his family is. Or does he? Before the story is over, he hands out a few surprises to his nearest and dearest, but it's a favor they return with a vengeance. This book is easy to read and hard to put down. Greg Lilly tells a serious story through the eyes of one very funny, very bright and utterly appealing young man. More of the same, please, and the sooner the better!
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6 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars I LOVED THIS BOOK ************************, March 31, 2006
By 
A. E. Miller "Book Lover" (Salt Lake City, Utah USA) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: Fingering The Family Jewels (Paperback)
I really enjoyed this book, I could not put it down until I finished it. There were alot of late hours believe me. The characters were very interesting, without giving anything away there were more twists here then in a pretzel. I loved how Derek handled everything and the support his sister (?) and aunt gave him. I also loved the ending and happiness that he finally found. I just can't wait until the next one comes out. Please do not wait so long like some authors do. If you enjoy a very good plot twisted book this is the one.

I wish you great success in your writing.

BIG FAN OF GAY WRITING.

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13 of 16 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars About time..., May 14, 2004
This review is from: Fingering The Family Jewels (Paperback)
It's about time a mystery gives us a character who isn't a stereotype. Gay, straight, detective or amateur, I am glad to read a fully rounded person in Derek Mason. This book focuses on Derek coming back to Charlotte, NC and discovering the twisted stuff his family is (and has been) involved. Political, business, personal, sexual - all the family secrets get "fingered."

This book is a fun read with each chapter pulling you to the next. By the end, I wanted more. Greg Lilly, we're waiting for the next Derek Mason Mystery.

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5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars loved the title, October 15, 2006
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This review is from: Fingering The Family Jewels (Paperback)
I bought the book because I liked the tongue in cheek title. I was glad I did. I am from the south and beside being a great mystery it nailed the south.
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Fingering The Family Jewels
Fingering The Family Jewels by Greg Lilly (Paperback - February 15, 2004)
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