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The Heart-Shaped Box [Hardcover]

April Henry (Author)
4.6 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (12 customer reviews)


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Book Description

January 23, 2001

The inimitable Claire Montrose is back, and as delightful as ever, in this third installment of April Henry's acclaimed mystery series. Claire wasn't part of the in-crowd at Minor High. In fact, she didn't have many friends at all, spending most of her time outside school tolling at Pietro's Pizza. Yet when the invitation to her twenty-year high school reunion comes in the mail, she decides to go.

After all, Claire is no longer the girl she was in high school, the one who was too smart, too tall, too skinny, and who looked a lot younger than she was.

Now maybe all her old handicaps are actually to her advantage. Not only that, she has a hip boyfriend named Dante, and a windfall from an old painting she inherited that turned out to be a Vermeer. So Claire sets off to see old friends, old lovers -- and maybe even a few old enemies.

While checking into Ye Olde Pioneer Village for the weekend festivities, Claire receives a mysterious package containing a heart-shaped box. Inside is a high school yearbook picture of Claire. A gift from a secret admirer? Then another box turns up -- in the limp hand of Cindy Sanchez, the former head cheerleader who is found strangled in the parking lot.

Before the night is over, five more women reveal that they, too, have received heart-shaped boxes. Is there a mad killer on the loose who will claim them all before the reunion is over? Or was Cindy, who had more lovers -- and more enemies --than anyone else in school, the only one marked for murder?

In a tale combining equal parts suspense and humor, Claire and the Minor High Class of '79 suffer a reunion nightmare they won't soon forget, as Claire struggles to stop a killer -- before the killer stops her.



Editorial Reviews

Amazon.com Review

"YOU ARE INVITED TO THE MINOR HIGH SCHOOL CLASS OF 1979 REUNION... BE THERE OR BE SQUARE." When Claire Montrose first reads the invitation, she reacts with a grimace (who wouldn't?). But while some things have changed since 1979, Claire, the curious, self-conscious heroine of April Henry's previous Circles of Confusion and Square in the Face, is still tall, thin, smart, and young-looking for her years. Deciding to flaunt the traits that kept her low on the high school social pecking order 20 years ago--and also show off her gorgeous Manhattan art curator boyfriend, Dante--Claire sends in her acceptance.

But the reunion weekend's first mystery crops up when Claire and Dante check in at Ye Olde Pioneer Village. Someone has left Claire a little heart-shaped box with a picture of her teenage self inside. And the first few drinks of the reunion icebreaker party have barely been downed when Cindy Sanchez, former head cheerleader and Minor High good-time girl, is found strangled in the parking lot, with another heart-shaped box in her hand.

As usual when she's faced with a puzzle, Claire's brain goes into overdrive. The chief of police (another old classmate) arrests a hotel employee who's found with Cindy's ATM card. Suspicion also falls on Claire's old friend Logan West, who's spent most of the intervening years in a mental hospital. But Claire doesn't think either man is guilty. Plenty of men might have found an excuse to slip out for a few minutes of auld lang syne with Cindy: Wade, her ex-boyfriend from senior year; Jim, Claire's own high-school flame; Richard, the class geek, now a high-tech millionaire; even Cindy's jealous, possibly estranged husband, Kevin. But none of them will admit to it. As the now-subdued weekend continues, Claire tries to narrow down her short list of could-have-done-its, knowing that she and the five other remaining women who received boxes may be in the killer's sights.

Though the clues--both real and false--are numerous and contradictory enough to seem a bit confusing, the murderer may not come as a big surprise to anyone who's read a few mysteries. Yet Heart-Shaped Box goes down as smoothly as chocolate. Just as Claire, with her kind heart, her little insecurities, and her one-glance perceptiveness and humor, appears to be gaining confidence and relaxing into her tentative relationship with Dante, so April Henry is relaxing into this ever-more-appealing series. --Barrie Trinkle

From Publishers Weekly

Amateur sleuth Claire Montrose continues to beguile but is underutilized in her third appearance, following Square in the Face (2000) and the Agatha- and Anthony-Award-nominated Circles of Confusion (1999). At the 20th reunion for the Minor (Ore.) High School Class of '79, held at Ye Olde Pioneer Village Theme Park, some things haven't changed. Cindy is still a tease and a flirt, even if she does have a husband in tow. Sawyer was a dreamboat teacher; now he's a dreamboat politician and the guest of honor. Wade was strange then, but he's stranger now and was even institutionalized for a spell. Dick was a geek. Now he owns a high-speed modem company worth a fortune. He's still a geek. Claire was thin and shy and poor and smart. She's less poor now and the presence of Dante, her handsome boyfriend, ought to make her feel more confident. But reunions have a way of resurrecting old insecurities. Several women at the western-themed opening night receive mysterious presents: small, handcarved boxes. Cindy gets one before she dies in the theme park parking lot. The nondescript Kyle, a cop and a member of the returning class, does most of the sleuthing. Alert readers will ignore the slew of overly obvious suspects and quickly arrive at the true identity of the killer. The selection of cute vanity plates (Claire's previous job was vetting plate applications for hidden obscenities) at the end of each chapter are worth a thin smile at best. (Feb. 2)
Copyright 2001 Reed Business Information, Inc.

Product Details

  • Hardcover: 273 pages
  • Publisher: HarperCollins Publishers; 1st edition (January 23, 2001)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0060196556
  • ISBN-13: 978-0060196554
  • Product Dimensions: 9.3 x 6 x 1.1 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1.2 pounds
  • Average Customer Review: 4.6 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (12 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #2,976,192 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

More About the Author

I write mysteries and thrillers. I live in Portland, Oregon with my family.

When I was 12, I sent a short story about a six-foot tall frog who loved peanut butter to Roald Dahl, the author of Charlie and the Chocolate Factory. He took it to lunch and showed it to the editor of an international children's magazine - and she asked to publish the story! (For no money, which might have been a warning about how hard it is to make a living writing.)

My dream of writing went dormant until I was in my 30s, working at a corporate job, and started writing books on the side. Those first few years are now thankfully a blur. Now I'm very lucky to make a living doing what I love. I have written ten novels for adults and teens, with more on the way. My books have gotten starred reviews, been picked for Booksense, translated into four languages, been named to state reading lists, and short-listed for the Oregon Book Award. And Face of Betrayal, which I co-wrote with Lis Wiehl, was on the New York Times bestseller list for four weeks in 2009.

I also review YA literature and mysteries and thrillers for the Oregonian, and have written articles for both The Writer and Writers Digest.

Heart of Ice (co-written with Lis Wiehl) came out in early April. And a teen thriller, The Night She Disappeared, will be published in January 2012.


 

Customer Reviews

12 Reviews
5 star:
 (10)
4 star:
 (1)
3 star:    (0)
2 star:    (0)
1 star:
 (1)
 
 
 
 
 
Average Customer Review
4.6 out of 5 stars (12 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews

17 of 17 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Delightfully Mysterious, February 14, 2001
By A Customer
This review is from: The Heart-Shaped Box (Hardcover)
Can't help but like the heroine, Claire Montrose -- so real and down to earth -- the kind of person I'd love to have for a friend right now. I adore all of her insecurities, and am delighted by her ability to see the humor in even the most mundane of situations.

I had the murderer pinpointed early on, but with several twists and turns in the story line, kept thinking that I had been wrong.

Totally enjoyable, I had a hard time putting the book down. Thanks to Claire (or rather April Henry), my uneventful weekend turned out to be most enjoyable.

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13 of 13 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars April Henry Scores Again!, February 13, 2001
By 
This review is from: The Heart-Shaped Box (Hardcover)
The first Clare Montrose book left me wanting another and 'Square in the Face' delivered - as has 'Heart-Shaped Box!' Clare is an interesting, sympathetic character not prone towards doing the awfully dangerous,irritating things some amateur sleuths do. 'Box' is set at Clare's 20 year class reunion and we see all the people we went to high school with in the cast of characters.Unfortunately, one and then another are found dead - and the clue that seems to tie the deaths together is a heart-shaped box, just like one Clare and some other women anonymously received before the reunion. The Clare Montrose books are somewhat cozy (which I like) but mainly written from a very 'real world' standpoint. If you enjoy character-driven mysteries, you'll enjoy this and the other Clare Montrose mysteries. The vanity license plates at the end of each chapter are an added treat!
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8 of 9 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A humorous who-done-it, January 24, 2001
This review is from: The Heart-Shaped Box (Hardcover)
After receiving the invitation to attend the Minor, Oregon class of '79 twentieth reunion, a hesitant Claire Montrose thinks back to the nondescript seventies. She fit perfectly in a decade that offered nothing except closure to the sixties, as she was far from popular. However, those liabilities in high school like being too tall or too smart are assets for a thirty-seven year old person. She decides to go to show off herself and her even more gorgeous boyfriend Dante.

At the reunion, Claire learns a prime law of physics. In spite of Dante and receiving a heart shaped box with her picture inside it, Claire's high school insecurities return threatening to engulf her. Before she can hide in a chem lab, someone murders another attendee who received the same type of box as April. Other coeds also were given the identical gift. Attendee police officer Kyle Kraushaar investigates the homicide while former vanity plate checker Claire does likewise.

THE HEART SHAPED BOX, the third entry in the Montrose amateur sleuth series, is a humorous who-done-it. The story line is fun and amusing, especially the vanity tags at the end of each chapter and Claire's outlook on life. The investigation follows mostly Kyle around, and in all honesty, the audience will feel we know Claire; he's no Claire. There are a plethora of suspects, but readers will easily hone in on the killer's identity. Still, Claire clearly remains a wonderfully insecure lead character making this novel enjoyable though not quite at the level of its predecessors.

Harriet Klausner

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Inside This Book (learn more)
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First Sentence:
Like the long stem of a flower, her neck curved away from him. Read the first page
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
Minor High, Hoe-Down Room, Richard Crane, Jim Prentiss, Kevin Sanchez, Cindy Weaver, Claire Montrose, Minor Miner, Juan de Jesus, Logan West, New York City, Sawyer Fairchild, Wade Merz, Alex Fogel, April Hairy, April Henry, Feed Trough, Rachel Munroe, Aunt Cindy, Cindy Sanchez, Dante Bonner, Dirty Habits, Kyle Kraushaar
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