
Description
The First Annual Aloha Scavenger Hunt is beginning. Journalist Natalie Seachrist, private investigator Keoni Hewitt, and friends Margie and Dan O`Hara are joining in the fun. Before departing for their Honolulu hotel, Natalie dreams of a film noire whodunit. Immersed in the action, she finds a man's body lying in a mid-1950s hotel, and watches an elegant woman search an adjacent room. After a murder occurs outside their suite, Natalie advises HPD Lieutenant John Dias that the details eerily parallel her "dream." Knowing the reliability of her unusual gift, the Lieutenant asks Natalie and Keoni to watch for clues to either death as the hunt continues.
After more visions, Natalie is convinced that the site of her earlier "dream" was in Chinatown and the perpetrator, a woman in a red suit. A false scavenger hunt clue's allusion to a priceless Kuan Yin statue suggest a cause for the disappearance of a man in the 1950s. Is this the man Natalie envisioned in a narrow hotel hallway? Is his death linked to that of the professor? And what of the false clue's reference to hidden treasure? Are these coincidences? Or, has Natalie's visioning revealed a murderer with long hidden secrets?
Product Details
Publisher | Artemesia Publishing, LLC |
Publish Date | April 02, 2019 |
Pages | 308 |
Language | English |
Type | |
EAN/UPC | 9781932926729 |
Dimensions | 9.1 X 6.2 X 1.0 inches | 1.3 pounds |
About the Author
Jeanne Burrows-Johnson draws on a multi-faceted background in the performing arts, education and marketing. The well-researched elements of her Natalie Seachrist mystery series invite the reader and listener into the sensory rich environs of Hawai`i, where she lived for over twenty years. Like her heroine, she and her husband enjoy feline companionship in an environment featuring dynamic skies, landscapes and characters.
Academically, she was accepted for membership in Phi Beta Kappa while completing her Bachelor's degree in History at the University of Hawai`i. During graduate studies and a teaching assistantship, she became a member of Phi Alpha Theta. She is also a Lifetime Member of the British Association of Teachers of Dancing, Highland Division.
Reviews
"A whodunit as smart and engrossing as the unlikely gumshoe." -- Kirkus Reviews
"Fans of a lighter mystery with rich characters and environments will devour this latest Seachrist story." -- Michael Radon, http: //www.theusreview.com/
"In this third entry of a mystery series, a woman's latest vision seems to be an unsolved, decades-old murder that links to a present-day homicide. Freelance journalist Natalie Seachrist is excited about the upcoming First Annual Aloha Scavenger Hunt in Honolulu. It's not far from her Lanikai home, but this is her first vacation with her boyfriend, Keoni Hewitt, a retired homicide detective. Unfortunately, mere days into the week long event, cops discover a body in the hallway of Natalie and Keoni's hotel. The crime scene resembles Natalie's recent vision. As it was her first vision in months, she initially dismissed it, believing the black-and-white images were her memory of an old film noir. Despite similarities between the recent murder and Natalie's vision, the latter was clearly from "an earlier era." The cop working the present-day case, Lt. John Dias, Keoni's old partner, has little evidence on the new homicide. But as he's aware of Natalie's ability, he encourages her to look into the mysterious murder of yesteryear even if she's not part of the official probe. Natalie tries connecting the two crimes by identifying the earlier victim as well as the hotel from her vision. And notwithstanding the decades separating the murders, there's a possibility of a solitary killer. Burrows-Johnson's (Murder on Mokulua Drive, 2018, etc.) protagonist, as in preceding novels, is an accomplished sleuth. Her visions may spark an investigation, but Natalie's research skills, stemming from her days in travel journalism, are what lead her to answers. The author's bountiful details explore Hawaii's history and culture, as scavenger hunt clues direct Natalie and Keoni to historical landmarks and the inquiry includes Chinatown in Honolulu. Though Burrows-Johnson tends to linger on descriptions of Hawaii's food and handsome locales, this tactic meshes with Natalie's investigative approach. The protagonist's pace, for example, is leisurely but never boring, as she consistently tracks down and pieces together evidence. Nevertheless, though the case reaches a resolution, questions regarding the culprit's specific motive and method remain. A whodunit as smart and engrossing as the unlikely gumshoe." -- Kirkus Reviews
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