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9 of 12 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars A mystery with a unique heroine
Department of Fish and Wildlife agent Venus Diamond takes a one-year leave of absence so that she can spend some significant time with her spouse. On the outside, Venus lives the ideal life. She is married to the man of her dreams and in a mansion that rivals any in the world. However, the material things she owns or can purchase does not stop her depression. Finally,...
Published on November 12, 1999

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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars Non-ascending Venus
After three outings that were fun, although a bit off-the-wall, this fourth effort is rather a total loss. Briefly put, Venus Diamond is on a case again, although she gets into it indirectly. The Greedy are seeking to profit from the Protectors of near-extinct wildlife. The Moralists and the Environmentalists are in there, too.
There were too many plot elements...
Published on March 25, 2002 by Jim Wickman


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9 of 12 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars A mystery with a unique heroine, November 12, 1999
By A Customer
This review is from: Habitat (Hardcover)
Department of Fish and Wildlife agent Venus Diamond takes a one-year leave of absence so that she can spend some significant time with her spouse. On the outside, Venus lives the ideal life. She is married to the man of her dreams and in a mansion that rivals any in the world. However, the material things she owns or can purchase does not stop her depression. Finally, when her husband goes away on an extended business trip, Venus accepts an assignment from her boss that instantly perks her up.

Breedhaven is a pioneering wild life preserve and genetic research facility located on Helix Island off the coast of Washington State. The director recently died in a mysterious fire that also took the lives of several leading scientists. The facility's director left behind a legacy with instructions on what to do with it in case of her death. Someone steals the legacy, leaving Venus to find it before endangered species become extinct due to its use. Though the danger mounts and her life is in jeopardy, Venus feels quite contented because she thinks she is useful again.

The protagonist is a unique individual whose only happiness seems to occur when she is on a case. Readers will like the investigating Venus who appears witty, determined, and intrepid. However, the audience will struggle to understand the married side of Venus who seems whipped, undecided, and cowardly. The mystery revolves around cutting edge technology that raises moral questions. Skye Kathleen Moody cleverly shows the viewpoints of several varying factions who have definite opinions on the subject of genetic engineering. Anyone who enjoys a well-written scientific mystery will want to read HABITAT.

Harriet Klausner

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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars Non-ascending Venus, March 25, 2002
This review is from: Habitat (Worldwide Library Mysteries) (Paperback)
After three outings that were fun, although a bit off-the-wall, this fourth effort is rather a total loss. Briefly put, Venus Diamond is on a case again, although she gets into it indirectly. The Greedy are seeking to profit from the Protectors of near-extinct wildlife. The Moralists and the Environmentalists are in there, too.
There were too many plot elements to keep track of; too many subplots that do little to advance the major thread; too many "just-in-time-and-place" resolutions of sticky issues.
Of course, everything gets more-or-less resolved by the last page, but one can hope that Venus' next outing will be more grounded and less contrived.
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4 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars Venus on Vacation, December 8, 1999
This review is from: Habitat (Hardcover)
In the previous Venus Diamond novels we have seen her as a get-tough, get-it-done Fish and Wildlife Agent. Since her marriage to Richard, Venus appears to have lost her way. She is depressed, goal-less, and unable to carry out her investigation of murder and theft in her usual no nonsense, efficient style. She is unable to dodge the bad guys, getting hit over the head more than once. Unfortunately, little sense is knocked into her. Venus needs to get her life back and with the Zen help of Dr. Wong might do so if she can muster up the motivation. Venus does get to realize one of her dreams, that of becoming an astronaut, but this part of the plot is decidedly far fetched.

As an avid reader of mysteries, and as a great lover of the out-of-doors, I would like to see Venus return to her roots and her kicking ways. This is not the Venus I have come to know and love.

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2 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars Bad author, BAD editor!, August 19, 2002
By A Customer
This review is from: Habitat (Worldwide Library Mysteries) (Paperback)
I'm not basing this judgement on just one book -- I read both "Wildcrafters" and "Habitat," to be certain that I hadn't merely caught the writer in a slump, or caught her editor on vacation. Alas, apparently not -- both books had the same flaws.

The main character in this series is supposed to be a highly professional federal Fish & Wildlife law enforcement agent. The second sentence of "Habitat," however, refers to "octopuses." That's on Page One, a foreshadowing of the many slips, hiccups, and foolish errors which insult the reader throughout the book.

More substantive, for instance, is an encounter in which our badge-carrying heroine is physically assaulted -- but when the police come, they treat the incident as a he-said she-said episode, and walk away. Come ON! Not in any jurisdiction in the nation would a federal law enforcement agent of any gender or agency be treated so cavalierly. But it's needed for the plot, as are so many other ludicrous developments, so the author plopped it in and the editor passed it by.

Moody has a wild imagination, and her books could be fun, silly, James-Bond-type romps -- for example, she drags NASA into this one, an agency not likely in real life to have anything at all to do with Fish & Wildlife. However, she needs a more thorough and stern editor to address not only the sloppy errors mentioned above, but also the tendency in both of the books I read to have too many narrative threads which have to be knotted together too hastily at the end. The result is neither attractive nor satisfying.

She could be good, but her style will always be more fantastical than realistic. If you're looking for believable wildlife settings with common-sense sleuths, stick with Dana Stabenow's Kate Shugak series, or Nevada Barr's Anna Pigeon. If you're looking for giddy and glamorous fun, Moody's Venus Diamond *might* be your girl -- someday. Here's hoping for better from this lively writer!

This was a private review by Lisa Small. See all of Lisa Small's public reviews:
http://www.amazon.com/gp/cdp/member-reviews/A13KQ84VC1HA30/
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1 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Fantastic environmental mystery, August 30, 2001
By A Customer
This review is from: Habitat (Worldwide Library Mysteries) (Paperback)
Habitat is the fourth mystery in Skye Kathleen Moody's series starring Venus Diamond, Fish and Wildlife agent, continuing her high level of suspense writing with another exciting and thought-provoking mystery. Venus, recently married and, at the insistance of her husband, on leave from her job, is suffering from depression which she attributes to Seasonal Affective Disorder. However, the doctor she consults diagnoses it much more accurately as 'spiritual suffocation.' When her husband, Richard Winters, accepts an overseas assignment, Venus agrees to help her boss with the particularly nasty and vicious murder of Dr. Hannah Strindberg, and simultaneously throws herself into grave danger while curing her soul's suffocation. Venus refuses to accept the arson investigator's formulaic solution to the crime, and instead investigates those associated with Strindberg in the secretive Breedhaven project to harvest, freeze, and clone embryos of endangered species. Once again, Moody gives readers an extremely well-crafted plot, which is supported by a tremendous depth of research. She demonstrates her sensitivity to a variety of viewpoints concerning the very complex issues of cloning, preservation of endangered species, and the relationship between science and the general public. Her characters are realistic, complex, and very well developed. This novel is most highly recommended for those readers who want an action-packed mystery which also has believable characters and a thought-provoking plot.
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1 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Jurassic Park plus Indiana Jones and the Lost Ark, April 3, 2000
This review is from: Habitat (Hardcover)
Interesting concept that combines a more realistic Jurassic Park and genetic engineering plus the concept of another Noah's Ark. Moody writes well and her heroine is realistic, gutsy, and funny.
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Habitat (Worldwide Library Mysteries)
Habitat (Worldwide Library Mysteries) by Skye Kathleen Moody (Paperback - February 1, 2001)
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