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The Long Good Boy (Rachel Alexander & Dash Mysteries) [Hardcover]

Carol Lea Benjamin (Author)
5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (7 customer reviews)


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Editorial Reviews

From Publishers Weekly

The title pun on Raymond Chandler's The Long Goodbye and the portrait of an adorable pooch on the front cover may give the reader the impression that Shamus Award-winner Benjamin's sixth Rachel Alexander and Dash mystery is going to be cute. Fuhgeddaboutit! The author's New York mean streets are mean and dirty indeed, if not downright ugly. Fearing they may be the next victims, a trio of transsexual prostitutes ("trannys") hire Rachel to find a friend's killer. Armed only with her formidable pit bull, Dash, Rachel dives into Manhattan's meat-packing district in quest of clues. Benjamin, a former private investigator, depicts this world and its denizens, tranny and otherwise, exceptionally well. Because she has a wonderful ear for dialogue and has interviewed the types of people she writes about, her characters come vividly to life. Among the best of her characters are her dogs, Dash and Clint the dachshund, whom Rachel must train to perform a feat of infiltration worthy of a Mission: Impossible episode. A skilled dog trainer, the author makes her respect for her canine characters' intelligence abundantly clear. There's enough plot to fill a book twice the size of this one, and at times the story seems to go off in several directions at once. More confusing than ingenious, the novel ends like Hamlet, with the cast of villains assembled and with almost as many corpses strewn about the stage. If it's all a bit too complicated, the best elements, the dogs and trannys, make this a mystery worth reading. Agent, Brandt and Brandt.

Copyright 2001 Cahners Business Information, Inc.

From Library Journal

In this exciting new anthology, 16 original stories blend mystery and astrology. Editor Perry's contribution, for example, The Blue Scorpion, weds historical fiction and ironic murder in a tale of two sisters with the same birthday who love the same man. Other authors include Edward Marston, Simon Brett, and Lillian Carl. For all collections.##+|0060198702George, Anne. Murder Boogies with Elvis. Morrow. Aug. 2001. c.256p. LC 00-067875. ISBN 0-06-019870-2. $23. ~Serial sister sleuths Mary Alice and Patricia Anne attend a benefit but wind up investigating the murder of an Elvis impersonator. More madcap adventures from the unlikely but always amusing pair.
Copyright 2001 Reed Business Information, Inc.

Product Details

  • Hardcover: 256 pages
  • Publisher: Walker & Company (October 2001)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0802733646
  • ISBN-13: 978-0802733641
  • Product Dimensions: 8.3 x 5.5 x 0.9 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 12.8 ounces
  • Average Customer Review: 5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (7 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #1,174,763 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

 

Customer Reviews

7 Reviews
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Average Customer Review
5.0 out of 5 stars (7 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Arf and a tail wag, June 27, 2002
This review is from: The Long Good Boy (Rachel Alexander & Dash Mysteries) (Hardcover)
Carol Lea Benjamin has been a dog trainer and private investigator. Her heroine, Rachel Alexander, a dog-trainer-turned-PI, comes from a traditional Jewish family that disapproves of both her occupations. Like Rachel's family, and like Rachel herself, we readers find ourselves asking, "How did she get into this?"
The Long Good Boy is sixth in the series featuring Rachel and her sidekick Dashiell, a superbly trained pit bull, with guide dog certifications that let him stay close to Rachel wherever she goes. And Rachel needs help when she enters Manhattan's meat-packing district to help three transvestite hookers find out who murdered one of their friends -- and whether one of them might be the next victim.
Rachel learns that another murder took place nearby, just the night before "Rosalinda" was murdered. Coincidence? Not likely. Determined to unearth the connection, Rachel goes undercover in a part-time sales job at Saks, finds creative ways to, um, release the files she needs from the meat company, and takes to the streets for a brief but memorable stroll.
Benjamin always plays fair. Dogs don't talk or solve crimes. Any top-dog trainer could turn Chi-Chi's tiny dachsund, Clint, into a competent burglar when Dashiell turns out to be the wrong size. Dog lovers will recognize Clint's expression after the first training session: "Thank goodness somebody finally realized I have a brain."
Benjamin's vividly depicts a world most readers would just as soon not know about: "tranny" hookers trying to earn money for dope, getting into strange cars, negotiating with "pimps" who are not much into employee relations. Yet the characters are portrayed three-dimensionally, sympathetically but not sentimentally. And somehow Benjamin manages to maintain the style of a "cozy" mystery in this totally un-cozy setting -- the sign of an author who is very much on top of her craft.
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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A one night read., October 12, 2001
By A Customer
This review is from: The Long Good Boy (Rachel Alexander & Dash Mysteries) (Hardcover)
Carol Lea Benjamin has written a crime novel that excels in many dimensions. It is a brilliantly plotted thriller that will keep your heart pounding up until the last word; her characters are so distinctive and quirky that you'll wish they were real and you had the chance to know them; her usual humor is as evident as ever; and, of course, the dog stuff is as informative as it is appropriate to the story. This is Ms. Benjamin's grittiest novel to date and a good read for any mystery lover.
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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Cozy in an Uncozy World, June 5, 2002
This review is from: The Long Good Boy (Rachel Alexander & Dash Mysteries) (Hardcover)
Carol Lea Benjamin has been a dog trainer and private investigator. Her heroine, Rachel Alexander, a dog-trainer-turned-PI, comes from a traditional Jewish family that disapproves of both her occupations. Like Rachel's family, and like Rachel herself, we readers find ourselves asking, "How did she get into this?"
The Long Good Boy is sixth in the series featuring Rachel and her sidekick Dashiell, a superbly trained pit bull, with guide dog certifications that let him stay close to Rachel wherever she goes. And Rachel needs help when she enters Manhattan's meat-packing district to help three transvestite hookers find out who murdered one of their friends -- and whether one of them might be the next victim.
Rachel learns that another murder took place nearby, just the night before "Rosalinda" was murdered. Coincidence? Not likely. Determined to unearth the connection, Rachel goes undercover in a part-time sales job at Saks, finds creative ways to, um, release the files she needs from the meat company, and takes to the streets for a brief but memorable stroll.
Benjamin always plays fair. Dogs don't talk or solve crimes. Any top-dog trainer could turn Chi-Chi's tiny dachsund, Clint, into a competent burglar when Dashiell turns out to be the wrong size. Dog lovers will recognize Clint's expression after the first training session: "Thank goodness somebody finally realized I have a brain."
Benjamin's vividly depicts a world most readers would just as soon not know about: "tranny" hookers trying to earn money for dope, getting into strange cars, negotiating with "pimps" who are not much into employee relations. Yet the characters are portrayed three-dimensionally, sympathetically but not sentimentally. And somehow Benjamin manages to maintain the style of a "cozy" mystery in this totally un-cozy setting -- the sign of an author who is very much on top of her craft.
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