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9 Reviews
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5.0 out of 5 stars Late Bloomer of Zubro / Paul Turner Mysteries
This was the first Zubro story that I've read and I thoroughly enjoyed this book - all in one day! My main criteria for a book: does it take me away from my dull and boring everyday life as a legal secretary? This story did that for me. Another reason for my enjoyment of this story was that I have attended DragonCon in Atlanta, and a couple of smaller writer conventions...
Published on April 15, 2008 by Lawrence L. Coles

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5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars bland and tedious mystery
I had never read a Paul Turner mystery and I doubt that I ever will read another one. This was a terrible book, tedious to read. Like many of the characters Zubro creates for this book, Zubro's writing is mildly interesting at best. Long lines of characters addressing the same issues...hardly the epitome of creativity.
Published on September 24, 2005 by PJSpeck


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5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars bland and tedious mystery, September 24, 2005
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I had never read a Paul Turner mystery and I doubt that I ever will read another one. This was a terrible book, tedious to read. Like many of the characters Zubro creates for this book, Zubro's writing is mildly interesting at best. Long lines of characters addressing the same issues...hardly the epitome of creativity.
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars Whose PR dept. wrote some of the other reviews?, July 19, 2006
Anyone that has read this book needs to read these 5 star reviews and it is obvious they are connected to the author or the publishing company. This has been one of the best mystery series, and until recently, my favorite. The prior book in this series was getting a little weak. Nerds that Kill falls flat. The dialogue is canned, the last couple of chapters appear slammed together and make little sense, and overall a bit boring. I'm sorry to see this happen, but Paul Turner has clearly jumped.
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4 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars Zubro's weakest novel., July 12, 2005
This is the weakest of all the Paul Turner Mystery's. It is a lesser book of a poor series. I sugguest Mr. Zubro not give up his day job.
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3.0 out of 5 stars It grows on you., June 26, 2011
I hadn't read any of the Paul Turner books previously, nor any other books by this author, but I didn't need to. This book stands alone. I will warn you, the prose is a little clunky, and it can sometimes get confusing who the non-main characters are when they pop back up. But the prose gets increasingly better throughout, and it's rather an engaging mystery overall. As a nerd, myself, who goes to conventions and may even own up to bringing her own sword on occasion, I found his setting engaging and generally true to life. This is a cozy-style mystery, so don't expect deep thinking or character progression. But, if you're looking for a quick read and a fun romp, this is a safe bet. Also, the homosexual angle is extremely minimal. So, whether you are looking for or to avoid that kind of wrinkle, it is barely even noticeable.
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5.0 out of 5 stars Late Bloomer of Zubro / Paul Turner Mysteries, April 15, 2008
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This was the first Zubro story that I've read and I thoroughly enjoyed this book - all in one day! My main criteria for a book: does it take me away from my dull and boring everyday life as a legal secretary? This story did that for me. Another reason for my enjoyment of this story was that I have attended DragonCon in Atlanta, and a couple of smaller writer conventions. The convention events in this story, along with the convention attendees (in costume or not), replicated the things that I have seen at 'real' conventions. There were a couple of minor characters brought into the interrogations that I found a tad tedious - but the repartee between Paul Turner and his fellow detective/partner Buck Fenwick entertained me during those particular interrogations. I look forward to reading more of Mister Zubro's mystery stories.
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1 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars Terrible..., October 29, 2006
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This is a slapped together, rambling, superficial mystery, one of the worst I've read. There's little character development (some glittery details and some dispicable people, but no character developement). Each chapter focuses on a new character, more or less, most of whom have no functionality in
the forward draggy motion of the plot. There is some amusingly backbiting descriptions of the publishing world, though that's not enough to save the book. I guess it might, however, intrigue some of those immersed in the publishing world--hence the glowingly positive reviews from a few.
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5 of 9 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars terrific police procedural, June 29, 2005
Chicago Police Department Detective widower Paul Turner raises his two sons Brian and Jeff with the help of his gay lover Ben. Lately Jeff, who is wheelchair bound, has become quite independent, which is driving poor Paul to distraction, but he admits only to himself that life has been good of late though he frets over Jeff constantly.

Paul takes his two teenage sons wearing costumes to the World's Ultimate Science Fiction Convention at the Greater Chicago Hotel and Convention Center. The cop figures he will survive even if Brian is a butt and Jeff is a pain until his official job intercedes. Someone murders renowned popular fantasy author Muriam Devers using a broadsword, a not so common weapon except at a sci fi convention where almost every teen including Paul's son has one. Soon other attendees are murdered with an assortment of convention weaponry. Paul and his partner Buck Fenwick seek a serial killer attendee who knows his or her armaments, a wolf amongst geeky sheep.

This is a terrific police procedural that is humanized by Mark Richard Zubro's making a strong argument on what constitutes a loving family. The cleverly crafted who-done-it hooks the audience as the two detectives make inquires at the gala. However, it is the personal side of Paul that grips the tale as he is openly gay yet is a nurturing father and a solid cop who shows how inane "Don't tell" is and how ridiculous using sexual preference as a values barometer truly is. NERDS WHO KILL is a fabulous murder mystery in a fine series that reminds the audience that individual behavior and respect are what counts not sexual preference.

Harriet Klausner
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2 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Rate this one five ostrich feathers!, June 13, 2005
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Bob Lind "camelwest" (Phoenix, AZ United States) - See all my reviews
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In this eighth book in the "Paul Turner" series, we join that Chicago police detective widower at home as his family (consisting of 16 year old son Brian, his 11 year old brother Jeff, who used a wheelchair due to spina bifida, and Paul's lover Ben, who owned a garage) prepared to attend a science fiction writers and media convention. Costumes were the rule at such affairs, with Jeff having worked on his own alien costume for weeks, while Brian went as the Beastmaster, complete with leather loincloth and jewel studded broadsword.

The next time that Turner saw a similar broadsword, it was sticking out of a popular but controversial science fiction writer who had been murdered in her room. Nearby was a red ostrich feather, that writer's trademark-like reference in her books, broken in half. That scenario would replay itself several times during the next 24 hrs, as Turner and his police partner, Buck Fenwick, found additional victims, most attendees at the convention, but including one police officer on the scene. Amid over a thousand eccentric convention attendees, most in costumes, Turner and Fenwick learn of the behind-the-scenes cliques and posturing that caused friction between many of them, and try to gauge if the arguments could have led to murder. An additional concern for Turner is the fact that Jeff's broadsword comes up missing, and might have been used in one of the murders, but this is soon overshadowed by a suspicion that his own children may be targeted by the elusive killer.

Another first-rate mystery from Zubro, one that should be especially interesting to anyone who ever attended a sci fi or Star Trek convention, since he seems to capture the different types of personalities one would find at such a gathering. Plot and characters were excellent, and kept me guessing till the end.
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0 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Not that bad, December 27, 2005
By 
Thomas W. Harbert (Summerville, SC USA) - See all my reviews
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I bought the book to be entertained and that is what I was. If you are looking for great literature then I would advise sticking with something else.
The same can be said for anyone looking for a police procedural. Afterall when Paul Turners son's sword turns out to be the murder weapon his boss should have pulled him from the investigation because of conflict of interest.
This is just an entertaining read. I basically read it in two settings and got some chuckles out of it.
The one word of criticism I have is that I had to pay a hardback price for it. Paperback would have been a better format as well as price for this.
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Nerds Who Kill : A Paul Turner Mystery
Nerds Who Kill : A Paul Turner Mystery by Mark Richard Zubro (Paperback - 2005)
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