"Terrific amateur sleuth tale"
Having lost her job and knowing that her beloved spouse
Barney has two years to go on his dissertation, Oregonian
Todd Fielding obtains work on the Brindle Times as the
newspaper's octogenarian owner Ruth Ann Coleman knows her
paper needs a computer expert journalist. Though on the
other side of the mountain from where Barney attends
school and teaches, Todd accepts the position that comes
with a rent free house. Barney's faculty advisor arranges
his schedule so that they can spend most of each week
together. Todd and Ruth Ann become close confidents as the
newcomer's work and ethics are excellent. When a high
school girl Jodie Schuster vanishes, Todd questions the
local cops who blow her off insisting she is just another
bored teen runaway. Todd investigates further and soon
finds a shocking pattern of missing teenage females over
recent years with law enforcement doing nothing except
yawning. With Ruth Ann providing an identical but much
older pattern of disappearances, the two women investigate
not realizing the danger from a town icon who wants his
predatory nature to remain secret. This is a terrific amateur sleuth tale that enables the
audience to first appreciate the strong relationships
between Todd and Barney (in spite of a sexual female
prowler), and Todd and Ruth Ann (the "cold" air and the
recognition the paper is the elderly woman's "baby").
Once the tale switches to the amateurs sleuth
investigation, fans obtain a fantastic mystery as the two
journalists struggle to uncover who is behind the
abductions of recent note and who got away with the first
generation killings under the watch of Ruth Ann's late
father. Kate Wilhelm writes a terrific thriller that
hopefully will have sequels set in Brindle, Oregon. Harriet Klausner
Reviewed by Harriet Klausner
Posted September 15, 2005
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