Jan M. (batgirl) reviewed The Father's Day Murder (Christine Bennett, Bk 11) on + 284 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 2
Love this series! Actually I love this AUTHOR, both of her series. This series is very cozy, ex-nun married to NYPD detective. Although she is not a writer, Jessica Fletcher comes to mind. Christine asks questions of everyone around, cooperates with the police, goes off at night to meet suspects (while Joe babysits) and nobody seems to think it is odd. Still I love the characters. Just suspend your reality a little bit and have a great time.
Helpful Score: 2
I love this series, but with this book I had a hard time keeping up with all of the characters. It was still a good read and did keep me guessing until the very end.
Penny T. (iluvmysteries) reviewed The Father's Day Murder (Christine Bennett, Bk 11) on + 431 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 1
I've been reading this series since it started and really enjoy these books.
Raydene B. (Knitbooky) reviewed The Father's Day Murder (Christine Bennett, Bk 11) on + 136 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 1
nice cozy mystery starring a former nun
Evelyn W. (Evelyn) reviewed The Father's Day Murder (Christine Bennett, Bk 11) on + 60 more book reviews
I enjoyed this book.
FRIENDS UNTIL DEATH Every year, the Morris Avenue Boys -- chums since childhood -- gather for a Father's Day reunion dinner. Now late in middle age, these men can bask in the rewards of honest success. So which of them seizes the opportunity that fateful evening to pull out an ice pick and stab to death the group's most celebrated member, novelist Arthur Wein?
As investigator (and former nun) Christine Bennett peels back the layers of the past, forty years' worth of secrets emerge from the shadows -- and the web of lies, theft, adultery, and blackmail woven by the once-innocent Bronx playmates rivals even the darkest plot of the dead man's novels. But in real life, this flesh-and-blood villain may never be caught. . . .
As investigator (and former nun) Christine Bennett peels back the layers of the past, forty years' worth of secrets emerge from the shadows -- and the web of lies, theft, adultery, and blackmail woven by the once-innocent Bronx playmates rivals even the darkest plot of the dead man's novels. But in real life, this flesh-and-blood villain may never be caught. . . .
I have yet to find a Lee Harris' books I didn't enjoy and this one was most enjoyable!