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McMansion by Justin Scott — book cover

McMansion

by Justin Scott
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Overview

Ben Abbott, realtor and private detective, is so incensed by mammoth McMansions that he refuses to sell them. Ben is not the only citizen of Newbury who is provoked by over-sized, ugly, wasteful houses, however: Billy Tiller, Newburys greediest developer, is discovered underneath his bulldozer.

Synopsis

Ben Abbott, realtor and private detective, is so incensed by mammoth McMansions that he refuses to sell them. Ben is not the only citizen of Newbury who is provoked by over-sized, ugly, wasteful houses, however: Billy Tiller, Newburys greediest developer, is discovered underneath his bulldozer.

Publishers Weekly

Scott's satisfying fourth installment of his Ben Abbott series (after 2003's Frostline) hinges on the murder of Billy Tiller, a greedy developer determined to ruin the smalltown charm of Newbury, Conn., with a string of tacky starter palaces. When he's found dead run over by a bulldozer the police arrest a young environmental activist, Jeff Kimball. Ira Levy, Kimball's lawyer, asks Abbott, realtor-cum-PI, to dig around. Abbott doesn't want to take the case he despised everything Tiller stood for and worries that his loathing might hamper his investigation but Levy twists his arm. Abbott determines pretty speedily that Kimball couldn't have committed the crime, but figuring out who did is a tad trickier. Though the reader never gets to know Abbott very well, this novel will resonate with those in the countless communities that are beset by real estate monstrosities. (Jan.) Copyright 2006 Reed Business Information.

About the Author, Justin Scott

Justin Scott is the author of twenty-two novels. He has been called the Dick Francis of yachting. In his other life as a mystery writer, he created the Ben Abbott detective series and was twice nominated for the Edgar Allan Poe Award. He holds Bachelors and Masters degrees in American history. He lives in Connecticut with his wife, the filmmaker Amber Edwards.

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Editorials

Publishers Weekly

In Talton’s excellent second Cincinnati Casebook mystery (after 2009’s Pain Nurse), Cincinnati homicide detective Will Borders commits himself totally to solving the gory murder of a glamorous local policewoman, despite being all too conscious of his physical limitations after undergoing spinal surgery. Meanwhile, in nearby Oxford, Ohio, pain nurse Cheryl Beth Wilson, who treated Will in the previous book, begins investigating after two of her students are butchered and a third is briefly the main suspect. The crimes reunite Will and Cheryl Beth, but recognition of their loneliness and decency lets them become uncertain but brave lovers—while the sadistic killer watches them and boasts about creating clever “deathscapes.” The Ohio local color lends depth, and the threat of extreme violence compels, but the novel’s chief interest is watching two mature, vulnerable people become real partners whose survival really matters. (May)

Publishers Weekly

Scott's satisfying fourth installment of his Ben Abbott series (after 2003's Frostline) hinges on the murder of Billy Tiller, a greedy developer determined to ruin the smalltown charm of Newbury, Conn., with a string of tacky starter palaces. When he's found dead run over by a bulldozer the police arrest a young environmental activist, Jeff Kimball. Ira Levy, Kimball's lawyer, asks Abbott, realtor-cum-PI, to dig around. Abbott doesn't want to take the case he despised everything Tiller stood for and worries that his loathing might hamper his investigation but Levy twists his arm. Abbott determines pretty speedily that Kimball couldn't have committed the crime, but figuring out who did is a tad trickier. Though the reader never gets to know Abbott very well, this novel will resonate with those in the countless communities that are beset by real estate monstrosities. (Jan.) Copyright 2006 Reed Business Information.

Kirkus Reviews

Sleuthing Connecticut realtor Ben Abbott (Stonedust, 1995, etc.) swings into action when Newbury's greediest developer is killed by a bulldozer. For the cops, the murder investigation couldn't be more open and shut. When you find a corpse under a piece of heavy construction equipment, you arrest the man in the driver's seat, in this case tree-hugging activist Jeffrey Kimball, who, as a bonus, had every reason to hate Billy Tiller. Jeffrey's father, a hip-hop entrepreneur, has never been close to his son, but he doesn't want to see him spend the rest of his life in prison, a fate Jeff, driven by a messianic complex, seems at least intermittently to embrace. So he hires hotshot attorney Ira Levy, who hires Ben to sow the seeds of reasonable doubt. It ought to be an easy job, since Billy was cordially disliked by an improbably large number of suspects who admit they could drive a bulldozer. But Ben isn't content with the strategy Bruce Kimball has mandated. Increasingly convinced the boy is innocent, he wants to find the actual killer, and he doesn't care how many influential citizens, from a cuckolded husband to a corrupt judge to the client's father, he has to confront before he shakes loose a lead. The plotting is plodding, and despite his tasty title, Scott brings no new urgency to the clash of environmentalists and developers. But he does give you a real sense of the ambivalent individuals behind the issues.

Book Details

Published
December 1, 2007
Publisher
Poisoned Pen Press
Pages
254
Format
Paperback
ISBN
9781590584705

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