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Contemporary Romance, Detective Fiction, Women Detectives - Fiction
Physical Education (Murder 101 Series #6) by Maggie Barbieri — book cover

Physical Education (Murder 101 Series #6)

by Maggie Barbieri
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Overview

College English professor and sometime amateur sleuth Alison Bergeron would’ve been thrilled to hear that her husband, NYPD Detective Bobby Crawford, was leaving Homicide if that were the whole story, but it turns out that Bobby’s next assignment is even worse—-undercover. As if worrying about his involvement in a case he won’t talk about at all wasn’t bad enough, Alison is forced to take over the women’s basketball team at St. Thomas after the coach dies of a heart attack during a game. She may not know much about basketball, but she’s no stranger to sleuthing, and it isn’t long before she suspects that the coach’s death may be more than unexpected but premeditated as well.

With Bobby deep undercover and Alison always on her way to deep trouble, it’s only a matter of time before they run smack into each other in Physical Education, the latest in Maggie Barbieri’s charming Murder 101 mystery series.

About the Author, Maggie Barbieri

Maggie Barbieri is a freelance editor as well as a mystery novelist. Her father was a member of the NYPD, and his stories provide much of the background for her novels. This is her sixth Murder 101 mystery. She lives in Westchester County, NY.

 

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Editorials

Publishers Weekly

Barbieri adroitly mixes campus politics, mob wars, and religious scandals in her sixth mystery featuring English professor Alison Bergeron (after 2010’s Third Degree). When Paul, the new mail carrier at St. Thomas, the small Catholic university in New York City where Alison teaches, turns up dead in the trunk of Alison’s car, her new husband, Det. Robert Crawford, warns her off the case. Paul, it turns out, is really Vito Passella, a member of a local crime family. Meanwhile, Alison is deeply involved in temporarily coaching the school’s basketball team—a true test of her tact in dealing with incompetent players as well as their pushy parents. What little remains of her time is spent trying to exonerate her friend Fr. Kevin McManus, forced to take leave as school chaplain after anonymous accusations of impropriety. That Crawford becomes evasive and reclusive adds to her stress, but Alison remains irreverent, cynical, and totally engaging throughout. (Dec.)

From the Publisher

Praise for Maggie Barbieri’s Murder 101 Mysteries

“Barbieri's fizzy fifth mystery featuring English professor Alison Bergeron rates well more than a passing grade. . . . Some punchy plot twists catapult the action to a satisfying reveal.”

—-Publishers Weekly on Third Degree

“Cute and cozy . . . Barbieri, the daughter of an NYC cop, has a nice, light touch with a procedural.”

—-Daily News (New York) on Final Exam

“The secret to a good mystery series is an appealing character. . . . Maggie Barbieri came up with a winner in her first book, and her amateur sleuth, Alison Bergeron, is still provoking laughs. . . . What follows is a romp, a serious situation, and a study of what it’s like to be young and stupid.  Barbieri aces this exam.”

—-Richmond Times-Dispatch on Final Exam

“Mystery, romance, and humor blend seamlessly. . . . Reminiscent of the Plum series, this one is not to be missed.”

—-RT Book Reviews (Top Pick!) on Quick Study

“Bergeron’s romantic trials and fashion sense are comparable to Sara Paretsky’s V.I. Warshawski. . . . Extracurricular Activities will find a home with readers of chick lit and cozy mysteries alike.”

—-The Tampa Tribune on Extracurricular Activities

Library Journal

In her fifth outing, professor Alison Bergeron (Third Degree), suspecting the college's basketball coach didn't die naturally, can't resist investigating. Thankfully, her NYPD cop husband, Bobby, is never too far away.

Kirkus Reviews

English Professor Alison Bergeron (Third Degree, 2010, etc.) gets stuck with another crap assignment when St. Thomas' basketball coach buys it during a game. Already in her boss's crosshairs for embarrassing the university by repeatedly stumbling across dead bodies, Alison is St. Thomas' go-to gal for jobs nobody wants. In addition to teaching a bazillion sections of freshman composition, she's served time at a local soup kitchen (Quick Study, 2008) and as interim residence hall director (Final Exam, 2009). Now Sister Mary is seeing red just because Paul, the campus mailman, has been found dead in the trunk of Alison's car. So when Michael Kovacs, coach of the women's basketball team, dies of a heart attack during a particularly dismal game, who better to take the helm of the Blue Jays than five-foot-ten Alison, who played for St. Thomas as an undergrad? The silver lining is that coaching brings Alison closer to her stepdaughter Meaghan, the taller and gentler of her detective husband Crawford's twins. (A good thing, since petite, prickly Erin hates her dad's new wife.) The cloud is that the Blue Jays suck. Even with the help of best friend Max Rayfield's husband, former All-City star Fred Wyatt, Alison can't buy a win. Not even high scorer Kristy Bianco can propel her team to victory, especially after her father is beaten senseless in an apparent robbery. But Alison suspects that the attack on Lou Bianco wasn't a random act of violence, and worse, that it may have something to do with her friend Father Kevin McManus' banishment as St. Thomas' chaplain. Connecting the dots is made harder by the double distractions of her coaching duties and Crawford's strange new remoteness. But Alison doesn't leave the job half done—no matter how many extra jobs she picks up.

Book Details

Published
November 22, 2011
Publisher
St. Martin's Press
Pages
352
Format
Hardcover
ISBN
9780312593292

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