From Library Journal
While negotiating for a collection of old and rare books, London antiquarian bookseller Dido Hoare (Ghost Walk, 1998) runs afoul of a decidedly dysfunctional family. The potential seller, once lover to a noted (but second-rank) deceased poet, also owns a number of valuable manuscripts, but there is some doubt as to her right to sell them. When someone frames Dido for the seller's murder, Dido and her father race to prove her innocence. Wonderful British surroundings, details of single-motherhood and keeping shop, and the vagaries of a dead poet all add to this title's draw. Strongly recommended.
Copyright 1999 Reed Business Information, Inc.
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Dido Hoare, the owner of an antiquarian bookshop in London and the single mother of infant Ben, always seems a few steps behind as she lurches from crisis to crisis, relying on her unflappable father, Barnabas, and on her baby-sitter, Phyllis. On the other hand, she has let her shop assistant talk her into putting the catalog online, and the Internet supplies a crucial clue in this improbable but thoroughly enjoyable cozy. Like Dido, the story lurches from place to place, London to Oxford, where an odd family wants to sell a book collection and possibly a manuscript or two. The family's matriarch dies in a spectacular house fire, with Dido present; when it turns out to be murder, and a lost manuscript appears in Dido's possession, she is in deep trouble. This series is best when concentrating on the bewitching minutiae of the book trade--in this case, who would kill for an unpublished manuscript? A natural for bibliophile mystery fans who enjoy John Dunning's Cliff Janeway series.
GraceAnne A. DeCandido
--This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.