From Publishers Weekly
Eightyish Sister Mary Helen is almost resigned to retirement and is learning to knit when a young friend, Sister Anne, suggests she volunteer at the Refuge, a shelter for homeless women in San Francisco. But during her first hours there, Sister Mary Helen finds the battered corpse of a young prostitute. As in previous books in this series (Death Takes Up a Collection, Death of an Angel), O'Marie's feisty heroine proves the match for any professional detective. The author, a San Francisco nun of the Sisters of St. Joseph of Carondelet, evokes convent life in the '90s with simple reverence and gentle humor. Who else would use such a homely aphorism as "If beggars were horses, this entire hill would be full of manure" on the same page with a passage ("O Beauty of ancient days, yet ever new") from the Confessions of St. Augustine? The clients of the Refuge, mostly past-their-prime prostitutes, are portrayed with compassion, yet with no attempt to sanitize the sordid realities of their lives. On Nob Hill, meanwhile, Richard Dunn, successful lawyer and erstwhile candidate for governor, is romancing the lovely Amanda, a paralegal in his firm. His plain, plump wife, Betsy, awaits him at home, finally facing the fact that he is a philandering heel. O'Marie twines the strands of these disparate lives with humor and sympathy. Readers won't forget, in particular, the authentic prostitutes Venus, Candy, Genie, Crazy Alice, Peanuts and Miss Bobbie. Mary Helen unravels the mess with her usual insight and sturdy independence, aided, she firmly believes, by her good friend God, who loves them all.
Copyright 2000 Reed Business Information, Inc.
--This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.
Unexpectedly forced into retirement by the arrival of a new president at Mount St. Francis College, feisty octogenarian Sister Mary Helen decides to volunteer at a downtown San Francisco shelter for homeless women. Before she has time to adjust fully to her challenging new ministry, she discovers the lifeless body of a young prostitute and becomes entangled in a psychologically twisted game of cat and mouse with the culprit. Being no stranger to murder, Sister Mary Helen is determined to help her old friends, homicide detectives Kate Murphy and Dennis Gallagher, solve the brutal crime. Undertaking her own quiet investigation, she uncovers a startling motive, endangering the lives of all the nuns at Mount St. Francis in the process. Fans of the Father Dowling mysteries will also enjoy the exploits of the indefatigable Sister Mary Helen. Another first-rate installment in an unfailingly entertaining series.
Margaret Flanagan
--This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.