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Fiction, Mystery & Crime, Fiction Subjects
Blue by Abigail Padgett β€” book cover

Blue

by Abigail Padgett
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Overview

Blue McCarron, the savvy, gay social psychologist with a yen for crime detection, is captivated by the bizarre case of Beatrice "Muffin" Crandall, a proper grande dame of 72 who has just confessed to murdering a man, chopping him up, and storing his body parts in a frozen locker. But why is Muffin's brother Dan asking Blue for her help in getting Muffin to retract her confession? And why are Muffin's wealthy society friends clearly lying to protect her? Stalking the truth will lead Blue to a desperate, nationwide conspiracy β€” and an unraveling mystery more dangerous than she bargained for.

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Editorials

Library Journal

Two years after her lover left without warning, Blue McCarron has retreated to an abandoned motel in the desert near San Diego. She's a social psychologist who is decidedly antisocial; her only companion is a Doberman named Bront . When the frozen body of a street hustler is discovered in a meat locker and an old woman, Muffin Crandall, confesses to his murder, Blue is asked to investigate. Muffin pretends to be crazy, but Blue doesn't buy it and sets out to find the real killer. Along the way, she befriends a prison psychiatrist and ex-con. Together they stumble onto a child prostitution ring and a secret organization determined to save the young prostitutes--at any cost. Blue has to confront demons from her past, including her twin brother, who is in prison, and her lingering passion for her missing lover. Blue is sassy, tough, scared, vulnerable, and funny--a great new character from Padgett, known for her Bo Bradley series (The Dollmaker's Daughters, LJ 1/97). Recommended.--Karen Anderson, Arizona State Univ. West Lib., Phoenix

Kirkus Reviews

The gifted author of five Bo Bradley mysteries (The Dollmaker's Daughters, 1997) kicks off her equally impressive new series with three bangs. When a San Diego tremor disables the timer in a public freezer, the five-year-old corpse stored inside (surprise #1) barely has time to come to room temperature before the police have a confession (surprise #2). The self-accused killer is (surprise #3) Beatrice ('Muffin") Crandall, 61, who claims she bashed the still-unidentified lowlife on the head when he broke into her place, then tied the body into a neat bundle, drove it to Roadrunner Ice and Food Storage, and waited to die of cancer. It's an incredible story, of course, and Muffin's brother Dan is sure that psychologist Blue McCarronβ€”a prickly, opinionated lesbian who's lived alone in a desert motel ever since her lover Misha Deland skedaddled two years agoβ€”can find enough flaws in it to get the confession thrown out of court and Muffin thrown out of jail. And sure enough, Blue's convinced that Muffin, a passionate activist who raised Dan after their parents died, is no killer. Before she can confront her with the flaws in her confession, though, Muffin is deadβ€”not of her fatal cancer, but of a poisoned Dr. Pepper. It's only the beginning of a new wave of violence against Muffin's tight-knit circle of friends, golden-agers who don't seem anywhere near ready for retirement. Blue's a social psychologist who sounds more like an anthropologist (or a zoologist) when she's talking about the male animal. But burning ears shouldn't keep readers of either gender from enjoying this suspenseful, boldly plotted tribute to the power of sisterhood.

Book Details

Published
March 1, 2001
Publisher
Mysterious Press
Pages
336
Format
Paperback
ISBN
9780446677028

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