Showing posts with label character: China Bayles. Show all posts
Showing posts with label character: China Bayles. Show all posts

Tuesday, May 31, 2011

Mourning Gloria / Susan Wittig Albert

Mourning Gloria by Susan Witting Albert (a China Bayles mystery, #19). 301 p.

China is a former lawyer turned entrepreneur; she runs several businesses with her friends, but at the core is her herbal shop in a small town in the Texas hill country. (Herb lore is always included in the books, and sometimes recipes are too.) China's particularly good at investigation and interviewing people, skills she picked up as an attorney. She's deeply invested in her community, so she digs around any time she thinks something bad is happening. In this particular case, she stops to report a trailer fire outside of town, realizes that someone's alive inside the trailer, and is unable to get the person out before the trailer explodes and the woman inside dies. She helps an eager young reporter who's investigating the fire...and then the reporter disappears, so it's all up to China.

Like all long-running series where the main character isn't a cop or a detective, it's a bit hard to swallow that China gets involved with so many murders. (Interestingly enough, China's husband is a retired-cop-turned-private-investigator, but China doesn't become involved in his cases; she's drawn into mysteries because she's nosy.) If you can overlook that problem, this is a well-done series. with strong, well-drawn interpersonal relationships.

Wednesday, April 21, 2010

Holly Blues / Susan Wittig Albert

Holly Blues by Susan Wittig Albert (A China Bayles mystery #18). 288 pp.

China Bayles is a former defense attorney turned entrepreneur, married to a former cop turned college professor and P.I. In this installment her husband's flaky ex shows up needing help, and China agrees to let Sally stay--it's close to Christmas, and this way Sally can see her son...except that someone seems to be stalking Sally, and the story she tells China keeps changing, and it all might be related to the murder of Sally parent's over a decade ago. This series has gotten a little, well, complacent; when it started China was adjusting from her big-city, fast-paced lawyer life to a slower, smaller town where she runs an herb shop, and that lent an interesting background to whatever mystery was happening. This series is somewhat more realistic than some mysteries, but by book 18 you have to wonder if every person China's ever met is going to have something awful happen to them.