Death in a Mood Indigo
Francine Mathews
(Author)
21,000+ Reviews
Bookshop.org has the highest-rated customer service of any bookstore in the world
Description
For two small children playing on Sconset beach, it was the stuff of nightmares...digging in the damp sand, hoping to unearth buried treasure, only to uncover instead a human skeleton. But for Detective Merry Folger, who's investigating the case, the real horror isn't revealed until she learns that the bones belonged to a woman who was apparently murdered anywhere between two and ten years ago. Who was she, and who could have hated her enough to strangle her and bury her deep in Sconset dunes? Faced with the daunting task of trying to put a name to the remains, Merry begins sifting through Nantucket's missing persons file...and turns up several possibilities. The most compelling prospect is Dr. Elizabeth Osborne, a beautiful, Harvard-educated psychiatrist who mysteriously vanished from the beach eight summers ago. Merry doesn't know if Elizabeth is her victim, but looking through her records she knows that the woman got a raw deal. The detective who handled her case never followed up, never questioned her husband's role in Elizabeth's suspicious disappearance. Angered by the negligence of a fellow cop, Merry decides to reopen the case...only to have her attention diverted by a shocking piece of news that changes everything. The Massachusetts police have just arrested a man who can be linked to the grisly unsolved murders of five young women found in various parts of Boston and its suburbs, five young women who were strangled to death...like a certain unidentified woman from Nantucket. Suddenly, as Merry ponders the fact that her Sconset beach skeleton could have been a serial killer's first victim, the FBI and the media descend on the crime scene like bees on a Nantucket daffodil. Butsomething doesn't add up, and just as Merry is beginning to wonder where this case is leading, another young woman is found brutally murdered on the island. And it isn't long before the dedicated cop finds herself defying her police chief father to play cat and mouse with a killer
Product Details
Price
$16.95
$15.76
Publisher
Soho Crime
Publish Date
March 28, 2017
Pages
352
Dimensions
5.0 X 7.4 X 1.0 inches | 0.55 pounds
Language
English
Type
Paperback
EAN/UPC
9781616957544
BISAC Categories:
Earn by promoting books
Earn money by sharing your favorite books through our Affiliate program.
Become an affiliateAbout the Author
Francine Mathews was born in Binghamton, New York, the last of six girls. She attended Princeton and Stanford Universities, where she studied history, before going on to work as an intelligence analyst at the CIA. She wrote her first book in 1992 and left the Agency a year later. Since then, she has written twenty-five books, including four other novels in the Merry Folger series (Death in the Off-Season, Death in Rough Water, Death in a Cold Hard Light, and Death in Nantucket) as well as the nationally bestselling Being a Jane Austen mystery series, which she writes under the penname Stephanie Barron. She lives and works in Denver, Colorado.
Reviews
Praise for Death in a Mood Indigo "A wonderful find . . . Detective Merry Folger comes across as a real person, albeit a smart one, with doubts and concerns."
--The Denver Post "Mathews uses her setting and its unique population skillfully."
--The San Diego Union-Tribune "An admirable, well-written series, with Folger evolving into an ever more complex character as love and loyalty collide with her professional pride and ethics."
--The Orlando Sentinel "Mathews writes appealingly, making her characters human, fallible, and thoughtful and her story line always believable. Essential for all mystery collections."
--Library Journal
--The Denver Post "Mathews uses her setting and its unique population skillfully."
--The San Diego Union-Tribune "An admirable, well-written series, with Folger evolving into an ever more complex character as love and loyalty collide with her professional pride and ethics."
--The Orlando Sentinel "Mathews writes appealingly, making her characters human, fallible, and thoughtful and her story line always believable. Essential for all mystery collections."
--Library Journal