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30 of 34 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Believable and entertaining
Though she is sixty years old, Kiki Goldstein feels she is the sexiest vamp in Hill Creek, California. In fact, the outgoing and totally confident Kiki feels she can turn any man into a "lust machine". Her older sister, the modest Hannah Malloy, feels her younger sibling is too loose with her morals. Kiki has a date on a cruise (that she won from the local flower club)...
Published on August 6, 1998

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11 of 13 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars Annoying....
This mystery would have been a winner if the story had been only about Hannah. But my goodness, Kiki has got to be the stupidest, most annoying character I have had the misfortune to run across in years. I fail to understand why Hannah (or anyone else) doesn't just knock the tar out of her. While the mystery was credible enough, the character of Kiki was simply too...
Published on October 30, 2000


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30 of 34 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Believable and entertaining, August 6, 1998
By A Customer
This review is from: A Very Eligible Corpse (Hannah and Kiki Mysteries) (Paperback)
Though she is sixty years old, Kiki Goldstein feels she is the sexiest vamp in Hill Creek, California. In fact, the outgoing and totally confident Kiki feels she can turn any man into a "lust machine". Her older sister, the modest Hannah Malloy, feels her younger sibling is too loose with her morals. Kiki has a date on a cruise (that she won from the local flower club) with Arnold Lempke, who she plans to score with tonight. However, in spite of Kiki's outrageous flirting, Arnold makes a play for Hannah before leaving in a vile mood.

However, instead of a date, the sisters find a murdered Arnold, lying among his beloved rose bushes. Since Kiki was earlier seen arguing with the deceased and she has no alibi. she become the prime suspect. Instead of panicking over the circumstantial evidence, Kiki flirts with the police officers at the crime scene, leaving it up to Hannah to prove her nutty sibling is a harmless siren, but not a killer.

A VERY ELIGIBLE ! CORPSE is a very humorous amateur sleuth tale that will leave readers laughing from start to finish. The two sisters with their contentious, but loving relationship, are two of the best characters to grace a who-done-it in a number of years. The murder mystery is puzzling enough to please most aficionados. Annie Griffin has scribed a winning opening gamut in what is hoped to be a long running series.

Harriet Klausner

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21 of 23 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Best new author I have read in ages !!!!!!!!!!!!, August 24, 1998
By A Customer
This review is from: A Very Eligible Corpse (Hannah and Kiki Mysteries) (Paperback)
Annie Griffin , please write faster ! The story is tightly held together,Griffin is a good storyteller. It is laced together with warmth, and is laugh out loud FUNNY !!!!!!! What a treat to read a new book and say , I can not wait for the next one ! A real winner !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

Betty Milton

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19 of 23 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Annie Griffin is the best new writter of the year!, February 6, 1999
By A Customer
This review is from: A Very Eligible Corpse (Hannah and Kiki Mysteries) (Paperback)
Annie Griffin brings the flavor of Marin County- rose gardens, parties, boutiques, coffee shops, gossip, and shopping - alive in her book. Ms. Griffin knows Marin and its inhabitants, I'm looking forward to meeting them again in her next book.
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7 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars More than a few chuckles..., May 30, 2001
This review is from: A Very Eligible Corpse (Hannah and Kiki Mysteries) (Paperback)
I will admit, this book is a guilty pleasure...I really wanted to dislike it since the set-up sounded a bit tired...2 sisters in their early sixties living in Marin County...Hannah-the more prim and proper of the 2. A bit more cynical and logical than her sister Kiki, a bit of a boozy flirt. Kiki's newest 'suitor' Arnold Lempke in found dead in his prizewinning rosebushes, and after the fight he and Kiki had the night previous, Kiki is now a prime suspect. Her sister Hannah comes to the rescue, determined to solve the identity of the real murderer, and get sis Kiki out of jail. This book was a real nice surprise. Hannah reminds me a bit of Magdalena Yoder (Pennsylvania Dutch mystery series by Tamar Myers) with her tongue-in-cheek humor and acerbic remarks. A fast and funny read for this first in a new series. I really enjoyed Annie Griffin's book and look forward to reading the 2nd!
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11 of 13 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars Annoying...., October 30, 2000
By A Customer
This review is from: A Very Eligible Corpse (Hannah and Kiki Mysteries) (Paperback)
This mystery would have been a winner if the story had been only about Hannah. But my goodness, Kiki has got to be the stupidest, most annoying character I have had the misfortune to run across in years. I fail to understand why Hannah (or anyone else) doesn't just knock the tar out of her. While the mystery was credible enough, the character of Kiki was simply too annoying to allow me to enjoy the book. She's a person I would avoid in real life, and I will be avoiding her in the literary world as well.
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6 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars Not my kind of gals!, July 23, 2002
By A Customer
This review is from: A Very Eligible Corpse (Hannah and Kiki Mysteries) (Paperback)
Let me begin by saying I love to read murder mysteries that feature older women in the role of part-time sleuth, so when I came across this new series by Annie Griffin, I bought all three before I had even read the first. What a disappointment and waste of money.

For starters, none of the characters are the kind I would enjoy as friends or neighbors or could really care about. Kiki, overly sexed and brainless, is surely the most grotesque female that I have ever met on printed page. Hannah, the part-time sleuth, cast as her sober, intelligent older sister and the brains of the crime-detecting duo, is less offensive yet just as superficial. What Griffins gives us is a collection of women characters, who are, for the most part, cardboard caricatures: the New Age psychic, the aging radical feminist, the ambitious society matron. It's as if she said, I need one of those, one of those, and throw that in too when she created them.

I did get through "A Very Eligible Corpse," wanting to be fair. After all, this was the first in the series. Surely it could only improve. Went on to "Tall, Dark, and Handsome." Just as in the first, the corpse is a Kiki paramour. Skipped to the last pages to see how it wound up before I put it aside. Didn't even start "Date with the Perfect Dead Man" when I read on the jacket blurb that this time Hannah is the suspect. Give me a break--I am willing to suspend disbelief, but surely an author needs more imagination than to have every one of the victims fall so conveniently within the reach of the sisters.

Sorry but I pass on this series. Will stick with and even re-read with intense pleasure, Simon Brett's Mrs. Pargeter, Dorothy Gilman's Mrs. Pollifax, and Hazel Holt's Mrs. Malory. These are women of substance, depicted with skill, intelligence, and comic flair!

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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Shows tremendous promise, April 2, 2002
By A Customer
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This review is from: A Very Eligible Corpse (Hannah and Kiki Mysteries) (Paperback)
I picked up this book because I'd exhausted all of the Southern Sisters mysteries by Anne Carroll George. I loved the mysterious adventures of those two ladies of a certain age in Birmingham and was hoping that Hannah and Kiki would fill the void. While the author was very adept at creating a sense of time and place, and the story itself was taut and interesting, I must agree with the other reviewers who singled Kiki out for scorn. Loud, shallow and man-hungry, she was a particularly silly and unattractive protagonist. (Her opposite number in the Anne Carroll George books was Mary Alice, also loud, shallow and man-hungry, but also a possessed of uncommon common sense when the chips were down.) Still, there was enough wit and skill on display in this first effort that I may give others in the series a try. Maybe Kiki will be refined a bit more and will begin to grow on me.
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3 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Hybrid tea roses and murder, December 4, 2000
By 
D. P. Birkett (Suffern, NY USA) - See all my reviews
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This review is from: A Very Eligible Corpse (Hannah and Kiki Mysteries) (Paperback)
The group of elderly gardening enthusiasts created an Agatha Christie like atmosphere. The detective and her falsely accused sister are both widows in their sixties. The observations on female sexual attractiveness and aging and self-esteem are sometimes penetrating and bitter but in general this is light-hearted and humorous. Some chunks of pedestrian prose like "Desperate over Kiki's predicament she felt powerless to help her." Can they really plant hyacinth bulbs at the same time of year as they're exhibiting roses in Marin County?
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5 of 9 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars Yes! Annoying!, January 6, 2001
By A Customer
This review is from: A Very Eligible Corpse (Hannah and Kiki Mysteries) (Paperback)
I absolutely agree with the reader from Shelbyville TN. I love Hannah but I don't know if I will continue with the series because I cannot STAND Kiki. It's a shame because this author can WRITE.
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A Very Eligible Corpse (Hannah and Kiki Mysteries)
A Very Eligible Corpse (Hannah and Kiki Mysteries) by Annie Griffin (Paperback - September 1, 1998)
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