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Murder His and Hers (Five Star First Edition Mystery)
 
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Murder His and Hers (Five Star First Edition Mystery) [Hardcover]

Barbara Collins (Author)
3.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (1 customer review)


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Editorial Reviews

From Booklist

Ever wonder what health and culinary standards apply to those cozy little bed and breakfasts that dot the countryside? In "Dead and Breakfast," the menu choices would tempt even Hannibal Lecter. Max Allan Collins has won two Shamus awards for his Nathan Heller historical thrillers. His wife, Barbara, is a widely published master of the short mystery. Their topics in this entertaining collection range from a father-daughter private eye team getting fleeced by their office manager to a murderous gigolo being done in by his conscience and a cat with an accusing gaze. In "Seeing Red," PMS becomes a weapon, and in "A Cruise to Forget," the killer gets his just rewards in a most unusual fashion. "The World's Greatest Mother" finds police confronted by a body and three women who all confess to the murder. Each of the eight tales boasts a plot twist that Hitchcock or even Rod Serling fans will savor. Recommend this highly to all fans of mystery short fiction. Wes Lukowsky
Copyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved

Product Details

  • Hardcover: 174 pages
  • Publisher: Five Star (ME) (April 2001)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0786231459
  • ISBN-13: 978-0786231454
  • Product Dimensions: 8.7 x 5.7 x 0.7 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 12.2 ounces
  • Average Customer Review: 3.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (1 customer review)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #4,230,303 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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1 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Only a couple worth reading, but they're gems, January 7, 2005
This review is from: Murder His and Hers (Five Star First Edition Mystery) (Hardcover)
Husband and wife authors Barbara and Max Allan Collins released this collection of nine short stories -- four by her, three by him, and two by both -- entitled Murder -- His and Hers in 2001, preceding Jonathan and Faye Kellerman's Double Homicide by three years. Unfortunately, the level of quality cannot compare, mostly due to one particular party.

Things get off on the wrong foot with "Eddie Haskell in a Short Skirt." Attributed to both Collinses, their voices are easily distinguishable, with each sticking to his/her own gender and trading off passages. Barbara Collins' writing is amateurish and juvenile, always telling more than necessary, in effect talking down to the reader. Max Allan Collins' (henceforth known here as Al) prose is cleaner and more assured.

First impressions are very important to me, and I believe that a short story collection should start off on its best foot. Operating on this belief, it was with some trepidation that I proceeded to the "Dead and Breakfast" Barbara solo. Written with three years less experience than its predecessor, the premise is more interesting but the ending is so bad, concluding with a trite pun (not even an original one -- and I like puns!), than I felt insulted, as if she were mocking me for bothering to finish her story.

The first Al solo story, "Cat's-eye Witness," to my great disappointment, wasn't much better. Yet another addition to the seemingly-endless genre of cat mysteries (and the first of two in this collection alone), it owes a great debt to the author's middle-namesake, Edgar Allan Poe. Unfortunately, the execution is hackneyed, the protagonist uninteresting, and the ending comes to easily, with improper development.

The opening sentence of "Reunion Queen" could give no better example of the low quality of Barbara Collins' writing: "Her mood darker than the night" is bad enough, but the fact that she then feels the need to explain that "the night was very dark" just shows the contempt she has for her audience -- that we won't understand just how dark the mood of "the striking blonde" was as she "tooled the candy-apple Jaguar into the Marriot lot" unless she tells us explicitly. There's one vital rule that she is breaking: assume your readers are at least as intelligent as you are. Her use of music as punctuation is clever but it does not support with is essentially a revenge story with a weird twist ending tacked on for shock value.

"Inconvenience Store" is (almost) worth the price of the book alone. An entry in the continuing Ms. Tree series of stories, this Al solo has a remarkable female lead unlike any I've seen and is a fast-paced, gripping tale of a trip to the market gone awry. (It was also the basis for Collins' independent film -- and innovative DVD -- Real Time: Siege at Lucas Street Market.) Al could teach his wife a few things about writing active females who take charge of a given situation and don't just whine bitterly, and also how to write endings and not come up with some off-the-wall conclusion that negates everything that came before. "Seeing Red" is another example. "Catgate" is a fascinating but weaker entry -- and the second cat-themed story -- from Al. A senator's murder of his mistress causes serious, and interesting, trouble from all sides, but the ending is just a little too pat.

Then again, it's still a sight better than Barbara's "World's Greatest Mother," a Dragnet pastiche that uses its faux-investigatory format to press a moral agenda. The last entry, "A Cruise to Forget," borrows heavily from Roald Dahl and still manages to be the best of the lot. Written by both Collinses, the prose is seamless, with no sign of who wrote what. Original to this collection, it is a hopeful sign of things to come. Murder -- His and Hers works best with seen as a portrait of developing short story talent, since it seldom delivers on the entertainment front.
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