"Fine fowl amateur sleuth tale"
Blacksmith Meg Langslow accompanies her fiancé, drama
professor and actor, Michael to the Friends of Amblyiopia
convention though neither wants to attend. Michael has a
minor part in the cult hit TV series Porfiria, Queen of
the Jungle that requires him to grace several of these
events as insisted upon by the executive producer
Tamerlaine Wynncliffe-Jones, who also stars in the title
role. Michael hopes he can persuade the unpredictable
star to give him a break, but expects nothing but grief
from QB as everyone calls Tamerlaine behind her back. Following the release of screeching parrots, someone kills
the unpopular star. The police quickly learn that many
people associated with the show and some just attending
the convention detested the victim. Unable to perch on
the sidelines and not trusting the police to follow the
real clues amidst a pageant of costumed characters, Meg
investigates the murder, unaware that if she learns the
truth a buzzard will kill her. The fifth murder so fowl Langslow amateur sleuth tale is
an amusing mystery that pokes fun at hero worship that
places stars on pedestals. The only seriousness in this
very humorous story line is Meg's inquiries into the
homicide. Fans will delight in the zaniness of the
support cast whether they are a monkey, parrots protesting
their candy cotton candy roles in the TV show, actors who
cannot use any pronoun but I, and Meg's wacky family.
Still Meg as in the previous terrific bird brained who-
done-its is the glue that keeps the plot together. Donna
Andrews furbishes a fabulously loony entry in her
delightful offbeat series. Harriet Klausner
Reviewed by Harriet Klausner
Posted February 8, 2004
SummaryIn We'll Always Have Parrots, Meg travels with her fiance
Michael to a fan convention for Porfiria, Queen of the
Jungle--a cheesy cult TV show on which Michael has a minor
role. Michael hopes the weekend will give him a chance to
talk Miss Wynncliffe-Jones, the show's temperamental
leading lady and executive producer out of enforcing a
certain provision in Michael's contract.
Of course, Michael's not the only person whose career the
dictatorial star has manipulated. So when the star is found
murdered, the police have plenty of suspects. Trouble is,
Meg doesn't believe they're going to arrest the right one.
Soon she finds herself following the murderer's trail
through a hotel filled with egotistical actors, costumed
fans, and a motley flock of monkeys and parrots who,
rebelling against their role as live scenery, have escaped
from their cages to take an active (and noisy) role in the
festivities.
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