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Detective Fiction, Women Detectives - Fiction, Police Stories, Character Types - Fiction
Liberty Falling (Anna Pigeon Series #7) by Nevada Barr β€” book cover

Liberty Falling (Anna Pigeon Series #7)

by Nevada Barr
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Overview

Anna Pigeon is in Manhattan to look after her hospitalized sister, and explores the Statue of Liberty in her spare time. But when a teenage girl falls to her death from Liberty's ledge, Anna wonders if the suicide was actually a homicide-and begins an investigation that puts her in the line of fire.

Synopsis

From New York Times best-selling author Nevada Barr comes another episode in the successful sleuth series. When Anna Pigeon left New York City after her husband was killed, she hoped it would be forever. But now her sister Molly is clinging to life in an uptown hospital ICU, so Anna has reluctantly returned. Rooming with a friend and fellow park ranger in close quarters on Liberty Island — the small strip of land that is home to Lady Liberty — Anna spends her free time exploring the grand monument and the crumbling, overgrown, and eerie ruins in the unrestored sections of nearby Ellis Island. But the peace she seeks here is shattered when she finds herself among a crowd gathered at the Lady's base, staring at the broken body of a teenager who fell — or was pushed — to her death.

San Francisco Chronicle

...[O]ne of the most genuine protagonists in mystery fiction.

About the Author, Nevada Barr

A former actress, restaurant critic, and National Park Service ranger, Nevada Barr is best known for her bestselling series of mysteries starring her intrepid heroine -- and alter ego -- Anna Pigeon.

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Editorials

Martha Moore

Unlike her previous mysteries featuring the admirable (if sometimes grumpy) Anna Pigeon, Nevada Barr seems a bit lost in Liberty Falling, like Anna is out of place in New York City. Just as Anna can't wait to return to her wide open spaces of Colorado, her fans will be eager to see her back at home, too. β€”The Mystery Reader.com

San Diego Union-Tribune

Nevada Barr has carved out her own fictional fiefdom, creating a body of work like no other.

San Francisco Chronicle

...[O]ne of the most genuine protagonists in mystery fiction.

The Bloomsbury Review

...Liberty Falling is [Nevada Barr's] best novel to date. And considering her small but powerful oeuvre [Blind Descent, Firestorm, Track of the Cat and three other top notch efforts], that says a lot. Like the parks and monuments she writes of, Nevada Barr should be declared a national treasure.

Publishers Weekly

Tenacious park ranger Anna Pigeon leaves the country wilderness for the wilds of New York City, where her sister Molly is hospitalized, in this seventh installment of Barr's popular series (Blind Descent, etc.). Although Anna is on leave, she gets involved in the investigation of two murders. An unidentified child falls to her death from the Statue of Liberty. The main suspect dies. Anna is attacked. An actress is fatally bludgeoned on Ellis Island. Anna's conviction that these events are connected leads to a cross-country search for a right-wing fanatic. As expected with Barr, the narrative teems with memorable characters-among them Charlie DeLeo, the caretaker of the Statue of Liberty's torch, and Anna's former lover, FBI Agent Frederick Stanton, now smitten with Molly. Though Barr ties up the many subplots in an action-packed finale, the mystery is slow to develop and there's little doubt that Molly will recover. Barr's atmospherics remain potent, however. Her evocation of the isolated, exotic nature of the two famous tourist attractions is a particular treat, bringing home how nature is inexorably reclaiming buildings and records a stone's throw from bustling Manhattan.

Library Journal

Having tackled New Mexico's Carlsbad Caverns in Blind Descent (LJ 3/15/98), National Park Service ranger Anna Pigeon now confronts the wilds of New York City. In between hospital visits to her critically ill older sister, Anna flees crowded Manhattan for Liberty Island, where she's staying with a fellow ranger, and Ellis Island. However, several mysterious incidents--the fatal fall of a teenager from the pedestal of the Statue of Liberty, the apparent suicide of a policeman accused of pushing the 14-year-old girl, a series of physical attacks on Anna--compels her to find answers. On a personal level, Anna also has to control her jealousy as she realizes that her former boyfriend is in love with her sister. Barr, a former park ranger, combines a plausible, intriguing plot with a fascinating behind-the-scenes look at Liberty and Ellis Islands that few tourists see. One minus: Barr's tendancy to overdescribe sometimes slows the action down. Still, this will be in demand. [Previewed in Prepub Alert, LJ 11/1/98.]--Wilda Williams, "Library Journal"

School Library Journal

YA-With her New Yorker sister critically ill, park ranger Anna Pigeon is staying with a fellow U.S. Park Service employee on Liberty Island and commuting back and forth to the hospital. When Anna becomes involved with two suspicious suicides at the Statue of Liberty, her own life becomes endangered. While the atmosphere of Ellis Island and the Statue of Liberty is vividly created, the story never quite jells. It bogs down in dealing with Anna's sister's illness and her feelings for her ex-boyfriend, now her sister's fiance. Also, this book does not have the intensity of the previous titles in the series, which had wilderness settings. There does not seem to be much here to attract YAs.-John Lawson, Fairfax County Public Library, VA Copyright 1999 Cahners Business Information.

Marilyn Stasio

It isn't the Grand Canyon, but to a naturalist like Barr, [the islands around Manhattan are] teeming with life.
β€” The New York Times

Kirkus Reviews

What does National Park Service Ranger Anna Pigeon do on her own time? She goes to New York, of course-bedding down on Liberty Island, the speck of land the Statue of Liberty shares with thousands of tourists each day and has pretty much to herself each night. Staying with fellow ranger Patsy Silva in order to be close to her psychiatrist sister Molly, hospitalized at Columbia Presbyterian with pneumonia, a kidney infection, and more, Anna thinks her biggest headaches will be Molly's grave illness and Anna's need to deal somehow with FBI agent Frederick Stanton, the ex-boyfriend who deserted her for Molly. But darker trouble is already brewing. An unidentified 14-year-old girl who jumped to her death from the parapet around the statue's base has sent James Patchett, the guard who was pursuing her, into deep depression. Why was the girl more willing to die than to have Patch, who thought she was a pickpocket, catch her? Why has her backpack disappeared? And why hasn't anyone claimed her body? As Molly Pigeon shuttles in and out of Intensive Care, pausing only long enough to encourage Anna's romance with surgeon David Madison, more casualties pile up on Liberty Island, including two who leave behind cryptic messages that Anna's convinced would tie half a dozen mysterious portents together-if only she were wise enough to decipher them. Though Barr works her customary magic with the eerily deserted nightscapes of Liberty Island, they're just not as arresting as the Lechugilla caves (Blind Descent, 1998) or the wild scenes of any of earlier six adventures. Score a mere double this time for the Park Service's answer to Mark McGwire. . .

Book Details

Published
October 1, 2010
Publisher
Penguin Group (USA)
Pages
336
Format
Mass Market Paperback
ISBN
9780425237359

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