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The Irish Cottage Murder: A Torrey Tunet Mystery (Torrey Tunet Mysteries)
 
 
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The Irish Cottage Murder: A Torrey Tunet Mystery (Torrey Tunet Mysteries) [Mass Market Paperback]

Dicey Deere (Author)
3.3 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (14 customer reviews)


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Book Description

Torrey Tunet Mysteries June 15, 2000
Meet Torrey Tunet. Great career. Big dreams. One terrible mistake.

Accept an invitation from a stranger who spills soup on her at a restaurant to stay at his Irish castle? What is pretty translator Torrey Tunet thinking? That's easy. She's thinking that luxurious rooms and gourmet meals beat the seedy Dublin hotel her agency booked for her. Fluent in numerous languages, Torrey intends to say non, nicht, nyet, and no way to any passes her host makes. But even Torrey is left speechless by what he actually suggests...and by stumbling upon a murdered man near a forest cottage. And when a priceless heirloom disappears and an old secret from her past surfaces, all fingers point to Torrey. Now she faces ruin-and gaol (jail)-unless she uncovers a truth darker than Irish nights about twisted minds, sinister passions and red-hot revenge...


Editorial Reviews

From Publishers Weekly

Dr. Gerald Ashenden, "Ireland's justly famous thoracic surgeon," is lucky to escape with only a broken shoulder after being trampled by his gray stallion, Thor, ridden by his pregnant granddaughter, Rowena Keegan, in this nominal cozy marred by clumsy, overheated dialogue ("That murderous attack on Gerald! Oh, no, Inspector! I did nothing of the kind!"), short, choppy chapters (81 in all) and improbable detail (a "glass-fronted" police station). Rowena's plucky American friend, language expert Torrey Tunet, is sure Rowena didn't run down her grandfather deliberately. But when someone shoots Thor with the tip of a knitting needle, causing the horse to throw Ashenden to his death, Torrey has her work cut out to prove Rowena's innocence. In her hunt for the real murderer, Torrey discovers that the doctor had a few skeletons in the closet: a blackmailing grandson, a jilted Danish girlfriend and a plot to induce abortion through an overdose of X-rays. Will Rowena get an abortion? Who's the father? Could it be a case of incest? Such questions as these generate some tension and suspense, but Deere, author of one previous mystery (The Irish Cottage Murder), has yet to learn how to convinceAat the climax, the police gather a bunch of suspects together and question them as a group. The revelation that the killer used a child's popgun to shoot Thor with the knitting needle is the final absurdity, while the reason Thor attacked his master remains a mystery. (Aug.) THE FIFTH WOMAN: A Kurt Wallander Mystery Henning Mankell. New Press, $24.95 (432p) ISBN 1-56584-547-1 ~ At the start of this Swedish version of the station-house police procedural, set in the Sk?ne district in the south of Sweden, Det. Kurt Wallander, who has just returned from an idyllic vacation in Rome, joins the hunt for the missing Holger Eriksson, an elderly poet. Finding the man's corpse in a ditch, impaled on sharpened bamboo stakes, brings Wallander back abruptly to the realities of crime in modern Sweden. While Wallander and his colleagues investigate the murder, another man is found dead in the local woods, making it clear that they have a brutal serial killer on their hands. The killer plans each murder carefully to ensure that the victim suffers for several days before dying. Who could hate these innocent-seeming men so much as to want to torture them to death? The police detectives must delve deeply into the victims' lives to find out what links them together and what might have made them a deadly enemy. Mankell takes the reader slowly and meticulously through the long investigation's progress, including frequent reversals. The policemen are constantly overworked and exhausted, but they make acute deductions and chase down every lead relentlessly. Mankell is a talented writer, and the translation by Steven Murray is graceful and colloquial, but the narrative is so bleak and brooding that it certainly qualifies as the darkest of Swedish noir. (Aug.) UNDER PRESSURE Abigail Reed. Forge, $6.99 (416p) ISBN 0-812-53928-1 ~ Reed's newest is a story of sexual harassment that begins when Karyn Christophe takes a job in the fashion department of Cybelle, a glamorous retail chain. There, Karyn's early days fuel her hopes that she can rebuild her life after a disastrous marriage, but trouble arises in the form of Lou Hechter, the department head. Brash and slimy, Lou has a penchant for harassing his female employees with lewd suggestions and even lewder acts. Unbeknownst to Karyn, he has been blackmailing her new boss, Cilla Westheim, into a secret sexual liaison for years. Tangled in her own web of shame and fear, Cilla is helpless to save Karyn, even as she watches the cycle begin again; in the end, it's Karyn who blows the whistle on Lou, after a near-rape that she has been prescient enough to catch on tape. Harassment has been too well covered in both fiction and nonfiction for this plot to generate much surprise, and the fashion theme also has a dated quality reminiscent of 1980s Steel or Krantz. But underneath the trendy subject and glossy surface, the book exudes an appealing emotional warmth. The love storiesAbetween Karyn and her new beau, Roger; and Cilla and her younger lover, ShaneAare charming and well detailed. (Aug.)
Copyright 2000 Reed Business Information, Inc.

From Booklist

American Torrey Tunet, a 28-year-old translator who lives near Boston, accidentally spills a bowl of soup on Desmond Moore, a rich Irishman. When Moore learns that Torrey will be translating at a Dublin conference, he invites her to his castle in the village of Ballynagh, but shortly after arriving in Ireland, she finds herself accused of murder and theft. Torrey must learn all she can in a hurry about Moore and Irish history if she hopes to find the real murderer. This first novel is capably written with interesting characters, vivid descriptions of Irish countryside and villages, and a tricky plot with numerous twists and turns. Despite its quaint village setting, Deere's tale is grittier than most British cozies and, thus, will appeal to fans of Bartholomew Gill's Irish procedurals. John Rowen --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

Product Details

  • Mass Market Paperback: 304 pages
  • Publisher: Minotaur Books (June 15, 2000)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0312971311
  • ISBN-13: 978-0312971311
  • Product Dimensions: 6.8 x 4.1 x 0.8 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 6.2 ounces
  • Average Customer Review: 3.3 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (14 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #1,461,096 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Customer Reviews

14 Reviews
5 star:
 (3)
4 star:
 (4)
3 star:
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2 star:
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1 star:
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Average Customer Review
3.3 out of 5 stars (14 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Great beginning to a new series, August 29, 2000
By A Customer
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This review is from: The Irish Cottage Murder: A Torrey Tunet Mystery (Torrey Tunet Mysteries) (Mass Market Paperback)
This is a book that will capture the reader's attention from the beginning. The plot is interesting and the characters are enjoyable. The many twists and turns keep the story moving and the reader involved. The heroine has a unique occupation which keeps the story fresh. All of the elements that make a good mystery are here, but they are used in new and refreshing ways. This is hopefully the start to a long series.
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5 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars Minus Mystery, April 3, 2002
This review is from: The Irish Cottage Murder: A Torrey Tunet Mystery (Torrey Tunet Mysteries) (Mass Market Paperback)
The author needs a decent proofreader first: names change (Emmet becomes Danny); there is no notion of currency (TRY to buy a custom-made copy of an antique necklace for five pounds! the rhinestones alone would cost twenty!); and the knowledge of Irish culture is based on too much green beer in Long Island! Then the characters are thinner than tissue paper.

However, the reader endures an awful lot in bad mysteries. A decent plot often gets the sufferer through amateur novels. This plot has more unbelievable coincidences than silly errors! An internationally traveling translator has soup upset on her in a Boston restaurant; the man who does it has just hired the translator's old flame from a tiny town to design his gardens in Ireland. He invites her and the designer to stay at his castle near Dublin. It gets worse. The evil victim bribes young girls aged 8 to 17 into perverted sexual acts, but also has a long-standing homosexual relationship with the 32 year old man who runs his stables? And now he's trying to get the 28 year old female translator into bed?

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7 of 9 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars Cozy Wannabe, May 8, 2000
The cover art is the best thing about this far-fetched story. The characters are one dimensional, the plot a real stretch - with all the murderous and bloody activity and bizarre leaps this novel still comes out as dull and lacking. While the beautiful Irish setting and the charm of the Irish people should provide a rich backdrop, the scenes change too quickly to be savored. Even translator Torrey Tunet's fascination with language seemed trite and contrived; she was stiff and not particularly unlikeable. The police were insultingly inept; the debauchery of the villain was so vile that it didn't even make good reading. A "cozy" wannabe that simply does not make it.
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Inside This Book (learn more)
First Sentence:
Just past a castle glimpsed on a hill, he spotted the pond through a break in the hedgerow and stopped the yellow Saab. Read the first page
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
Brian Coffey, Desmond Moore, Castle Moore, Maureen Devlin, Inspector O'Hare, Fergus Callaghan, Torrey Tunet, North Hawk, Winifred Moore, Sergeant Bryson, Janet Slocum, Black Pride, Miss Tunet, Jimmy Bryson, Lars Kasvi, Garda Siochana, Sheila Flaxton, Donna Lefebvre, Dun Laoghaire, O'Malley's Pub, Rowena Keegan, Chief Superintendent O'Reilly, Duke of Comerford, Bishop's Path, Castle Comerford
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