From Publishers Weekly
St. Louis-based amateur detectives Claire and Gil Hunt get mixed up in an intriguing mystery of murder, kidnapping and voodoo in their second outing (after 1999's Murder Is the Deal of the Day) from Randisi, author of the Joe Keough, Nick Delvecchio and Miles Jacoby series, and poet and playwright Matthews. A business trip for her TV show takes Claire and Gil to New Orleans, where the beignets are delicious and the music from Bourbon Street plays through the night. But the spell is broken when Claire's prospective client, a mask-maker who calls herself "Auntie Laveau," arranges to meet Claire in a historic graveyard and later turns up dead. Connected to Auntie Laveau by notes found at the victim's home, Claire and Gil reveal all they know to the authorities before going back to what they hope will be a normal life in St. Louis. When the New Orleans police ask them to return and identify a comatose woman, Gil embarks at his peril on a trip that will lead him further into the bizarre world of voodoo, which proves to be as much a part of the Big Easy as jazz, gumbo and Mardi Gras. Hexes, potions and spells interweave with vivid settings, two delightful sleuths and credible supporting characters, from Marie Laveau, the original Voodoo Queen, to her 21st-century counterparts. One can only hope that the concluding vow Claire and Gil make not to become involved in another mystery is short-lived. (Jan. 14)created the Shamus Award.
Copyright 2001 Cahners Business Information, Inc.
From Booklist
St. Louis television personality Claire Hunt and her bookseller husband, Gil, travel to New Orleans to buy miniature Mardi Gras masks for their
Home Shopping Mall program. Their first meeting with the artist who creates the masks (and claims to be a descendant of legendary Voodoo queen Marie Laveau) makes Claire suspicious. When the woman is murdered, the Hunts realize that they were dealing with an impostor. When a second woman is gravely injured, the Hunts find themselves helping the police investigate, which takes them deep into the Voodoo subculture of New Orleans. Life-threatening encounters ensue. The colorful New Orleans atmosphere and the appealing relationship between Gil and Claire help make up for a rather mundane plot. Working with coauthor Matthews, Randisi, best known for his hard-boiled Nick Delvecchio and Miles Jacoby novels, shows a softer side in this reasonably entertaining semi-cozy, which follows the series debut,
Murder Is the Deal of the Day (1999).
Barbara BibelCopyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved
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