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Arkansas Traveler (Benni Harper Mysteries)
 
 
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Arkansas Traveler (Benni Harper Mysteries) (Hardcover)
by Earlene Fowler (Author)
  4.4 out of 5 stars 24 customer reviews (24 customer reviews)  


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Editorial Reviews
Amazon.com
Benni Harper is coming home to Sugartree, Arkansas. The folk-art historian, ranchwoman, and unwitting detective of Earlene Fowler's Agatha Award-winning series is back in the Ozarks for Sugartree Baptist Church's Homecoming festivities. Benni's brought both her husband, Gabe, and her best friend, Elvia Aragon, from California for the occasion, which promises to be a celebration of the best of small-town Southern life. For Benni that will always carry "the memory of muggy Arkansas summer nights filled with the scent of sweet honeysuckle, fresh-mowed grass, and the taste of half-melted Dairy Queen chocolate sundaes."

But Benni's nostalgia is cut short abruptly when the worst of small-town Southern life rears its ugly head. Benni's childhood friend, Amen Tolliver, is running for mayor against incumbent Grady Hunter, whose son Toby--a fledgling white supremacist--will do anything to make sure a black woman doesn't win his father's office. When Toby is found with his head beaten in, and Amen's nephew Quinton becomes the prime suspect, Benni's idealism takes a backseat to curiosity--and to the painful consequences of exposing both the prejudices and the skeletons that Sugartree residents would prefer to keep deep in the closet.

Fowler is perhaps more concerned with local color than with the rigors of mystery plotting, lovingly creating a world bound by faith, friends, and food--especially food. Witness Benni's soliloquy to Ozark comestibles, sparked by her first glimpse in years of a Piggly Wiggly grocery store: "'Blue Bunny and Yarnell's ice cream,' I said gleefully. 'Delta Gold syrup. White Lily flour. Aunt Nellie's corn relish. Martha White cornmeal. Crowder peas! Eight flavors of grits. Eight! You can't get that in California.'" But so appealing are Fowler's characters and so enticing is that world, that the novel's essentially anticlimactic denouement will probably seem of little importance. Fowler is rapidly proving herself a master of the American cozy, and the Benni Harper series continues to improve with each outing. --Kelly Flynn

From Publishers Weekly
If your image of quilters is that of old ladies whiling away the hours in rocking chairs or at looms, then perhaps you've not met Benni Harper, the frisky director of the Josiah Sinclair Folk Art museum in San Celina, Calif. In her eighth winning outing (after 2000's Seven Sisters), Benni returns to her hometown of Sugartree, Ark., accompanied by her friend Elvia, and finds relatives and friends embroiled in racial, religious and romantic rivalries that turn their reunion into disunion. Sugartree, population 5,000, has its share of bigots, hidden and overt, and two events have already stirred them up. Benni's friend Amen Tolliver, a black woman, is running for mayor against wealthy white incumbent Grady Hunter. And Sugartree's two Baptist churches, one black, one white, are discussing a merger that has deeply divided both congregations. Being Hispanic, both Elvia and Benni's husband, Gabe Ortiz, attract unwelcome attention after Gabe's arrival, threatening the blooming romance between Elvia and Benni's cousin Emory. When the ugliness leads to murder, Amen's election chances are jeopardized and an innocent young man is arrested. However, there are also plenty of decent people in Sugartree and a lot of great food, memories and humor. Benni needs all her vaunted spunk to solve a killing that threatens to scar the town she loves, as Fowler delivers cozy entertainment without resorting to unrealistically syrupy solutions.

Copyright 2001 Cahners Business Information, Inc.



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Product Details
  • Hardcover: 304 pages
  • Publisher: Berkley Hardcover; 1st ed edition (April 10, 2001)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0425178080
  • ISBN-13: 978-0425178089
  • Product Dimensions: 8.5 x 5.8 x 1 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 15.7 ounces
  • Average Customer Review: 4.4 out of 5 stars 24 customer reviews (24 customer reviews)
  • Amazon.com Sales Rank: #528,826 in Books (See Bestsellers in Books)

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Earlene Fowler's latest blog posts
       
 
Earlene Fowler sent the following posts to customers who purchased Arkansas Traveler (Benni Harper Mysteries)
 
12:27 AM PST, November 18, 2006, updated at 12:26 AM PST, November 18, 2006
Dear Friends,

It's been a while since I've written.  Those of you who receive my website newsletter know why.  On August 7, four days after I wrote my last Amazon plog, my elderly father fell in his apartment and hit his head.  It was a day and a half before I found him.  That incident started a month long time of emergency room visits, intensive care rooms, doctor after doctor, a stay in a nursing home.  It ended with my father moving in with my older sister (five miles from me).  He is in the middle stages of dementia, probably Alzheimer's, and we're doing everything we can to help him live as normal a life as possible.  Those of you who have or are currently going through similar situations with loved ones know how much it changes your life.  So many things have to take a backseat to caring for him.  My sister and I are fortunate in that both of us work from our homes and have wonderful, supportive husbands.  Still, it's difficult, especially for her.  Much of the time he doesn't know where he is and has lost any memory of the last three years (when he moved from the house he and my late mother retired in to a senior apartment a few miles from my sister and I).  This is what he has said to me, "I went to sleep in my house in Hesperia and woke up in Mary Edith's house."  Three years gone, just like that.  It boggles my mind.  So, because of this new family situation my writing schedule has changed.  The good news is I've agreed to write two more books for my publisher.  Another mainstream book and another Benni book.  I'm working on the mainstream right now.  It's called Love Mercy and is set in Morro Bay, California.  Love Mercy is the name of one of the main characters.  The other book is another Benni book.  But, because of my "new normal," I am taking a year and a half to write Love Mercy.  It will come out in May 2009.  Tumbling Blocks, my next Benni book, comes out in May 2007.  There will be no new book in 2008.  Another Benni book comes out in 2010.  I hope you all understand.  We are living day-to-day with Daddy.  Really, Alzheimer's teaches you that.  You can't predict how each day will go.  But, I guess that's a good way to live life whether you have Alzheimer's or not.  There is truly joy in each day.  I see it in my dog's delight in playing with his favorite pickle toy, my dad's enjoyment of an ice cream cone, the new grass that is growing in front of my house, writing a good sentence, sharing a laugh with my husband, hugging my sisters.  God is good and I'm truly thankful for all He has given me.  Have a wonderful Thanksgiving.

Happy Trails, Earlene
 
20 Comments    

10:52 PM PDT, August 3, 2006
Tonight I had one of my monthly dinners with Beebs and Millee (yes, to those of you who've read my Benni Harper books, they are real people, though about thirty-some-odd years younger than the Beebs and Millee living across the street from Benni).  As always, we had a great time.  I looked through their latest scrapbooking creations; they told me what was going on in their lives; I told them how my book tour went and what I'm working on now (guess it's been longer than a month since we met).  We ate too much (well, I did) and made too much noise (me, again...they are very classy)and generally had a good girlfriend time.  As we were standing in the parking lot saying good-bye, which always takes a good fifteen minutes, we got to talking about shopping.  Millee had experienced a particularly successful foray at the local Hallmark store and Target and bought a bunch of great scrapbooking albums on sale (one she gave to me...it had cowboys all over it...cool!)  We started talking about shopping rhythm and how when you have it with a friend or a sister, you know it the first ten minutes you shop together.  Now, they have it naturally, because they are twins.  The rest of us "civilians" have to search for people who have the same shopping rhythm.  You know what I mean, that person who when you shop together in the same store you don't necessarily stick side-by-side, but somehow you flow through the store, up and down aisles, but eventually meet back with each other usually with funny stuff to try on (or sometimes good stuff...hopefully more than one so you don't have to flip a coin for it).  There is nothing more fun than shopping with someone who matches your rhythm.  Those who don't like to shop, well, you won't get what I'm saying.  And those of you who do like to shop, you know that you have certain people with whom you just click. So here's a big credit card salute to all my shopping buddies!  Life would be a lot more mundane without you!
 
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