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Walla Walla Suite: (A Room with No View) A Novel
 
 

Walla Walla Suite: (A Room with No View) A Novel [Kindle Edition]

Anne Argula
4.3 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (9 customer reviews)

Print List Price: $12.95
Kindle Price: $8.99 includes free wireless delivery via Amazon Whispernet
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Sold by: Random House Digital, Inc.
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Editorial Reviews

From Publishers Weekly

Hard-boiled, fast-talking Quinn, a Seattle cop turned PI, faces new challenges in her edgy second outing (after Argula's Edgar-nominated 2006 debut, Homicide My Own). Quinn has scored a job with Vincent Ainge, a mitigation investigator who helps keep convicted serial killers off death row. She's also taken on her first case as a PI: finding Eileen Jones, a popular, attractive 18-year-old who vanished from her job in Vincent's office building. Vincent's attraction to Abby Jones, Eileen's mother, interferes more than it helps with Quinn's investigation, but his connections become invaluable when Eileen's body is found, and Roger Merck, a disturbed man with a record of sexual assault, is charged with the murder and due to be executed if convicted. Quinn, suspicious of Merck's sudden confession, digs deeper and learns the shocking, brutally poignant truth. Quinn sometimes comes off too tough and cynical, but Argula takes care to show her emotional side as well, creating an impressively well-rounded and modern heroine. (Sept.)
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

Product Description

Quinn, a newly divorced ex-cop, retains custody of her wild hot flashes, her twisted tongue, her fey sense of humor, and her propensity for trouble. Now trying to get a foothold as a P.I. in a new city, Quinn takes what she thinks will be a safe job with Vincent Ainge, to whom she is oddly attracted. Vincent, who has his own demons, is the only mitigation investigator in the Northwest working to save the lives of convicted killers from ending at the gallows in Walla Walla state prison.

When a young secretary named Eileen vanishes, the woman’s boss hires Quinn to track her down. What looks like a missing-person case turns out to be anything but, sucking into its wake Vincent, his demented father, Eileen’s barely legitimate boss, her sexually vulnerable mother, a serial rapist and possible serial killer, and, of course, Quinn herself. Quinn’s improvised investigation takes her to the dangerous dark corners of the human psyche and casts suspicion where she least expects it, which will ignite a burst of violence and a resolution that readers won’t see coming.

“This book will delight anyone who has ever feared that the private detective novel has no new tricks–or voices–up its sleeve.”
–Laura Lippman, author of What the Dead Know

“Anne Argula brings a welcome voice to the noir novel with Quinn, who is earthy, gritty, but above all, a mature woman. We don’t have enough of those.”
–Sara Paretsky, author of Fire Sale

“A terrific, suspenseful tale of murder, driven by interesting and quirky characters, leavened by edgy self-deprecating humor, and resolved by a surprising twist.”
–Joseph Wambaugh, author of Hollywood Station

“A wonderful novel–smart, funny, and remarkably humane.”
–James Crumley, author of The Right Madness

“Anne Argula’s menopausal detective will give mystery fans multiple hot flashes of horror, humor, and surprise.”
–Tom Robbins, author of Villa Incognito


From the Trade Paperback edition.

Product Details

  • Format: Kindle Edition
  • File Size: 354 KB
  • Print Length: 271 pages
  • Publisher: Ballantine Books (December 10, 2008)
  • Sold by: Random House Digital, Inc.
  • Language: English
  • ASIN: B001NJUPDY
  • Text-to-Speech: Enabled
  • Average Customer Review: 4.3 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (9 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #482,742 Paid in Kindle Store (See Top 100 Paid in Kindle Store)
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Customer Reviews

9 Reviews
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3 star:
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Average Customer Review
4.3 out of 5 stars (9 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews

1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars More views of Quinn, please!, December 20, 2007
Finally...a new series with promise! Quinn is a 3-dimensional character who practically bounces off the page. I love her combination of cynical wisdom -- product of her experience as a cop and her divorce -- and very human weaknesses. She's very open about her hot flashes but not to the point where we wonder if we've stumbled on a women's magazine by mistake. She's just seedy enough to render homage to the classic PI literature -- living in Pioneer Square, struggling for clients -- but driving a nice car (a "divorce present").

Quinn meets some interesting people: Arnie, who runs a mysterious business with three "angels" helping him; Bernard the ticket scalper; and Vincent, her special buddy who fears he's getting Alzheimers. She gets involved in a plausible way with the murder of a sweet young girl, someone who worked in the same building. And she more or less stumbles on the murderer and brings him to justice, though not without some tragic consequences along the way.

True mystery aficionados will guess the ending because Argula follows the conventions of detective stories. That's not a negative at all. I admire authors who treat their readers fairly.

I also like Argula's writing: enough surprises to avoid standard cliches but not so many that we're forced to stop and notice. Good mystery writing is almost invisible: we're engrossed with the story, as we should be.

Since I live in Seattle, I appreciate the lovingly detailed setting: Eilliott Bay Bookstore, Pioneer Square, rain, and seasons. I must say I haven't noticed the Pacific NW tendency to politely avoid digging into people's backgrounds, but I'll pay more attention next time.

Just two quibbles. Quinn remains the only fully developed character, and easily the only sympathetic character. I didn't notice till I was writing this review, and it's very common in the genre. And wouldn't Quinn be getting a pension from the Spokane police department? She seems to have put in enough years to qualify.

But the biggest complaint I have is, we have to wait almost a whole year to get the next volume in the series.
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars One Walla Isn't Enough, October 5, 2007
Walla Walla Suite is an excellent and modern take on detective fiction. It has some hard boiled aspects to it, but really it's more of a three minute egg; the core of the novel is soft under the hard exterior. Maybe that's a better explanation of the main character, Quinn, a woman of a certain age whose tough, ex-cop public persona is tempered by a melancholic wisdom. There is a sense of loss surrounding her that is logical considering her history, but she isn't needy. She's cagey and funny and bright.

I don't want to reveal any more about the plot than has been mention above, but, being a big fan of detective novels, especially Laura Lippman and Sara Paretsky--both of whom endorse this book--I really liked this book. I have already recommended it to most of my friends.
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A thoughtful and literate page-turner, September 27, 2007
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I knew and admired this author in her "previous life." Argula's hot-flashing - and hard-boiled - PI protagonist, Quinn, intimates early on her belief in reincarnation, which goes back (at least) to her previous adventures in "Homicide My Own." That perfect ear for dead-on real dialogue (from that previous life) is still intact, along with a real feel for the seedy-side-of-Seattle setting, making you feel like that fly on the wall in every scene. Both of Argula's books read like skillfully-wrought screenplays (or perhaps TV scripts). My choice for the role of Quinn? Christine Lahti - a thinking-man's babe, particularly for us older guys. Walla Walla Suite will appeal to all fans of the mystery genre, but particularly to older readers, with its oblique references to the 70s and its wry, careworn heroine. As for the almost love interest, Vincent Ainge? Too beautiful. Write on, Ms. Argula. I expect to soon see Quinn mentioned often in the same breath with PI icons like Robicheaux, Scudder and C.W. Sugrhue. - Tim Bazzett, author of the ReedCityBoy trilogy and Love, War & Polio.
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More About the Author

Camera-shy Anne Argula published her first Quinn mystery, "Homicide My Own," a story about a cop who solves his own murder from a previous life, with an independent publisher previously known for poetry and literary essays. When the book was nominated for an Edgar Award, she was pulled out of the shadows, reluctantly.

Since then, many have claimed that her three novels (and another in the works) were written by her mentor and sometimes nemesis, author/screenwriter Darryl Ponicsan. An ongoing investigation of the two writers unfolds on the website www.litpair.com, which the author urges her readers to boycott.

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