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Q is for Quarry (Kinsey Millhone Mystery) by Sue Grafton
Book Summary InformationAuthor: Sue Grafton Edition: Paperback Audio: English (Unknown); English (Original Language); English (Published) Published: 2007-08-28 ISBN: 0425220192 Number of pages: 368 Publisher: Berkley
Book Reviews of Q is for Quarry (Kinsey Millhone Mystery)Book Review: "Q" is just plain...godawful. Summary: 1 Stars
Well, I'm glad that somebody liked this book, because otherwise, it wouldn't have sold more than a dozen copies. I thought it was Grafton's worst in the whole series. Sue Grafton has an unfortunate, ongoing yen for sleazy bad girls who make life miserable for a large number of regular folk before somebody gets cheesed enough to bump the little parasites off. "Q" is no different and what makes it worse is that this is the story of an old crime that nobody particularly WANTS solved, as they have all gone on with their own lives and are better off without the victim. I'm sure this would sound cold in real life, but in fiction, the worst thing an author can do is create a whole book full of characters that nobody gives a crap about, and Grafton has done it here. The desert townspeople are sullen, resentful and dull, the victim was disgusting, and Grafton falls back yet again on the Kinsey-in-danger-in-the-dark ending that has become more than a bit tiresome. Only her funny junk food excursions with the old cop keep this one from completely circling the bowl.
My view is a bit slanted, because I came late to Grafton's alphabet series and read them all, from A-M, back to back. This is not always good, because it makes it much easier to spot the author's little tricks and quirks that are normally spread out in batches several years apart. Still, reading N-S as they've been published, I wish that Grafton would stake out some fresh territory for Kinsey Millhone. I'll keep reading her, because I feel too invested in the series to stop now, but I hope she can make the victims a bit more palatable starting with "T". Anybody who was as annoyed as I was by "Q" is not going to like "R" or "S" much better.
Summary of Q is for Quarry (Kinsey Millhone Mystery)Quarry, n. An open excavationQuarry, n.Transitive: To dig up or take from.Intransitive: To delve intoQuarry, n. An object pursued or hunted; preyShe was a "Jane Doe", an unidentified white female whose decomposed body was discovered near a quarry off California's Highway 1. The case fell to the Santa Teresa County Sheriff's Department, but the detectives had little to go on, and after months of investigation, the murder remained unsolved.That was eighteen years ago. Now the two men who found the body, both nearing the end of long careers in law enforcement, want one last shot at the case . . . and they turn to Kinsey Millhone to help them find closure. But revisiting the past can be a dangerous business, and what begins with the pursuit of Jane Doe's real identity ends in a high-risk hunt for her killer.Based on an unsolved homicide that occured in 1969, Q is for Quarry, and Grafton's interest in the case, has generated renewed police efforts. In the last year, the body has been exhumed, and a facial reconstruction made that appears in the last pages of the novel. It is hoped that the photograph will trigger memories that may lead to a positive identification. Private investigator Kinsey Millhone has served Sue Grafton well through 16 letters of the alphabet in a perennially popular series that occasionally breaks new ground but more often traverses familiar territory, as is the case here. Two old, ailing cops--one retired, the other disabled--try to breathe some life into an 18-year-old mystery that haunts them both for different reasons. They enlist Kinsey's help in identifying the victim, a young woman who was murdered and left for dead in the old quarry of the title. Neither they nor Kinsey expect that reopening an old case will incite the killer to strike again--not once, but twice. And while the real case of the still-unidentified victim that inspired this fictionalized scenario continues to languish in the cold case file in the Santa Barbara sheriff's office, Grafton's solution is as plausible as any. While the unlikely trio of Millhone and her cranky geezer sidekicks offers a few chuckles, the inner reaches of Kinsey's soul remain largely inaccessible to her as well as to the reader, which will probably not bother most of Kinsey's or Grafton's many admirers. --Jane Adams
United States Books
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