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5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
I want more!, August 1, 2005
This review is from: Relics (Faye Longchamp Mysteries, No. 2) (Hardcover)
Faye Longchamp, an archaeology graduate student, has been asked to lead her first major excavation. She and her (assistant) friend, Joe Wolf Mantooth, go to a remote Alabama settlement. Her task is to uncover the origins of a mysterious ethnic group of people called the Sujosa. These people have shown immunity to many diseases, including AIDS. The Sujosa have lived in the remote hills for centuries. They are very poor and do not trust "outsiders". Yet Faye is determined to gain their trust and dig up the facts that would trace the Sujosa's heritage.
Faye is hardly settled in when she awakens, late one night, to find the house on fire. Faye manages to save herself and one other housemate, but Carmen, the project's oral historian, dies. Questions abound about how the blaze began and where Carmen's aluminum briefcase had disappeared to. A few days later, a local teenager dies at a cell phone tower. It looks like suicide, but some things just do not add up.
Faye, Joe, and Fire Marshal Adam Strahan must figure out what Carmen had in her oral history notes worth killing for, before someone else dies.
**** This novel is rich in historical details and written in a way that the plot is easily understood. Readers will have no trouble following along as this tale of mystery and intrigue guides them into a web of deceit. Author Mary Anna Evans has found her writing niche in the genre of Mysteries. BRAVA! I want more! ****
Reviewed by Detra Fitch of Huntress Reviews.
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4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
more Joe!!!!!, October 2, 2005
This review is from: Relics (Faye Longchamp Mysteries, No. 2) (Hardcover)
2nd in the Faye Longchamp series, Faye travels to Alabama to an archeological site researching an isolated group of people referred to as the "Sujosa". Interesting to outsiders is the Sujosa's resistance to AIDS, so they are under a microscope that doesn't make them happy. Faye encounters resistance from the site coordinator when she tries to set up a proper dig, not to mention outright hostility from the locals. With Joe's help (hubba hubba!), she manages to get things on track, until the building housing the staff goes up in flames. Faye manages to rescue one co-worker but another dies in the fire. After that a local boy commits suicide, complicating the situation. Joe sets out to track in ways only Joe knows how, and Faye uses her observation skills to help the fire marshall find clues to the arson, as well as using the copies of the work of her dead co-worker, an oral historian, had given her the night she died. There are a lot of story lines in the mystery, but they are all intriguing and none detract from the main interests of the mystery. Another wonderful mystery from a talented writer!
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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Archaeology and Suspense a Thrilling Combination, December 26, 2005
This review is from: Relics (Faye Longchamp Mysteries, No. 2) (Hardcover)
Archaeologist Faye Longchamp is working on a a project in backwoods Alabama, studying the Sujosa who are a clan of dark skinned people with Cacausian features who seem to be immune to AIDS. But the project is plagued with problems from the beginning, because the jobs and grant monies that have been promised to the Sujosa have not been delivered and the head of the operation, Dr. Raleigh seems to be working against, rather than for the project.
Then Faye wakes to flames in the house where she is staying. She escapes, but her friend Dr. Carmen Martinez who had been working on an oral history of the Sujosa does not. Then a young Sujosa man apparently commits suicide by jumping from a cell phone tower. The fire was arson, the suicide was murder and Faye is in trouble.
Ms. Evans first Faye Longchamp mystery ARTIFACTS won the Benjamin Franklin Award for excellence and this one is every bit the book that one was. Both will keep you enthralled.
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