"Zany roller coaster police procedural"
Cook County Chief Medical Examiner Phil Blasky informs
Chicago Violent Crimes Unit Detective Jacqueline "Jack"
Daniels that the morgue has a slight problem, a pair of
extra arms handcuffed together. Jack and her partner Herb
Benedict, thinking that the 100 plus degrees outside is
cooler than their office, stop by the morgue where Jack's
handcuffs link the arms. Soon other body parts surface at the morgue as if an
insider is toying with the medical examiner and the cops.
After several people are killed, the two cops finally
catch the apparent culprit aspirin popping Barry Fuller;
Jack and Herb feel they have stapled the case shut until
the accused takes a lie detector test. While the serial
killer case looks suddenly lost Jack's home front turns
weirder then ever when her mom, assisted by her former son-
in-law Alan, moves in with her while her current boyfriend
Latham Conger wonders what is going on; for Barry a new
list of Jack's circle now exists. BLOODY MARY is a zany roller coaster police procedural
that the alternates perspectives between the cop and the
killer. The story line starts off grippingly eerie, picks
up weirdness and speed, but slows down towards the middle
as readers know too much, only to suddenly detour yet
accelerate into hyperspeed once Fuller is caught but
apparently will walk due to lack of evidence. Jack's
personal life adds craziness that is so out of control
that a serial killer aimed in some perverse way at her
seems like a lark. Fans will need to toast Jack with a
WHISKEY SOUR for handling her personal life with chocolate
and a murder investigation as her escapes. Harriet Klausner
Reviewed by Harriet Klausner
Posted July 24, 2005
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