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The Fractal Murders by Mark Cohen — book cover

The Fractal Murders

by Mark Cohen
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Overview

Now in paperback—the lively first novel featuring former Marine JAG and private eye Pepper Keane. When math professor Jayne Smyers discovers that three murder victims with apparently unrelated cases were each an expert in fractal geometry, she hires Pepper to find the killer.

Synopsis

Now in paperback—the lively first novel featuring former Marine JAG and private eye Pepper Keane. When math professor Jayne Smyers discovers that three murder victims with apparently unrelated cases were each an expert in fractal geometry, she hires Pepper to find the killer.

Publishers Weekly

A surprising premise and an extraordinary theme equal an accomplished debut. That's simple math, but the geometric concepts that fuel Cohen's book are far more advanced. Former federal prosecutor Pepper Keane is hired by University of Colorado mathematics professor Jayne Smyers to look into the deaths of three colleagues who had nothing in common other than their field of expertise fractal geometry. An FBI investigation prompted by Smyers found no link among the geographically separate, methodologically different deaths (two of them murders, one ruled a suicide). An appealing maverick, Keane lives in a small mountain town near Boulder with two animal rescue dogs, collects old-time rock 'n' roll and country music tunes and likes to read philosophy. In his dogged effort to connect the three deaths, Keane butts heads with an old FBI nemesis and finds an occasional ally, as well as an unexpected rival. While the killer's identity turns out to be disappointingly ordinary, Cohen's writing style is direct and amazingly lucid, even when handling the concepts and applications of fractal geometry or outlining the tenets of Martin Heidegger. Readers looking for something refreshingly different should be well satisfied. Agent, Sandra Bond. (May 13) FYI: An earlier version of this novel was published in 2002 by Muddy Gap. Copyright 2004 Reed Business Information.

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Editorials

Publishers Weekly

A surprising premise and an extraordinary theme equal an accomplished debut. That's simple math, but the geometric concepts that fuel Cohen's book are far more advanced. Former federal prosecutor Pepper Keane is hired by University of Colorado mathematics professor Jayne Smyers to look into the deaths of three colleagues who had nothing in common other than their field of expertise fractal geometry. An FBI investigation prompted by Smyers found no link among the geographically separate, methodologically different deaths (two of them murders, one ruled a suicide). An appealing maverick, Keane lives in a small mountain town near Boulder with two animal rescue dogs, collects old-time rock 'n' roll and country music tunes and likes to read philosophy. In his dogged effort to connect the three deaths, Keane butts heads with an old FBI nemesis and finds an occasional ally, as well as an unexpected rival. While the killer's identity turns out to be disappointingly ordinary, Cohen's writing style is direct and amazingly lucid, even when handling the concepts and applications of fractal geometry or outlining the tenets of Martin Heidegger. Readers looking for something refreshingly different should be well satisfied. Agent, Sandra Bond. (May 13) FYI: An earlier version of this novel was published in 2002 by Muddy Gap. Copyright 2004 Reed Business Information.

Kirkus Reviews

Cohen's debut, self-published in 2002, plunges a federal prosecutor-turned-private eye into the unexpectedly murderous world of higher mathematics. What are the odds that three of the country's leading experts in fractal geometry-the study of those minute and indivisible patterns that structure apparently random shapes like shorelines-would die violently within a few months? University of Colorado math professor Jayne Smyers, who sent her paper on fractals to five peers only to learn that three of them were unavailable for comment, doesn't believe in that kind of coincidence. She wants Pepper Keane, a former judge-magistrate for the Marines with a taste for Heidegger and Gordon Lightfoot, to find out what's going on and whether she's in danger herself. Buzz-cut Pepper, who not only reads Being and Time but insists on explaining it to you, is little more than a collection of cliches, the most important of which is his grudge against Mike Polk, the Denver FBI agent responsible for his lover's death, and for burying the current case in denial that the three deaths were related. But Cohen has a gift for making fractals, which have unexpectedly lucrative applications, not only accessible but exciting. And his hunt for the killer-abetted, of course, by the obligatory colorful sidekicks and burgeoning romance-crackles with mounting tension. Only the gratuitous final twist, which demonstrates mainly that the author's capable of a final twist, spoils the workmanlike geometry. Agent: Sandra Bond/Bond Literary Agency

Book Details

Published
July 1, 2005
Publisher
Hachette Book Group
Pages
370
Format
Paperback
ISBN
9780446614917

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