Bobby Foster, car-hop at the chic Cafe Comedie, is going to the gas chamber. He's already confessed to the murder of Tracy Kostakos, the club's rising star. But two years after the crime, Tracy's body is still missing and Bobby's confession is full of holes. All Souls Legal Cooperative's final appeal sends San Francisco's #1 P.I. Sharon McCone behind the footlights into the super-charged arena of anxious club owners and aspiring young hopefuls...into the fractured world of Tracy's privileged family and the mind of a young comedienne who was not the good little girl they thought they knew...into a labyrinth of death and deception where someone will kill to laugh last and get away with murder.
Marcia Muller is an American author of mystery and thriller novels. Muller has written many novels featuring her Sharon McCone female private detective character. Vanishing Point won the Shamus Award for Best P.I. Novel. Muller had been nominated for the Shamus Award four times previously. In 2005, Muller was awarded the Mystery Writers of America's Grand Master award. She was born in Detroit, Michigan, and grew up in Birmingham, Michigan, and graduated in English from the University of Michigan and worked as a journalist at Sunset magazine. She is married to detective fiction author Bill Pronzini with whom she has collaborated on several novels.
Sharon is asked to investigate a case involving a young man on death row. His attorney believes that he’s innocent and that he was coerced into confessing. The victim’s body was never found. What Sharon uncovers are a web of lies, and some really despicable people—just another day in the life of a San Francisco PI. This book was published 1990, so it’s a fascinating time capsule look into San Francisco 30+ years ago.
I really liked the story of this one. A young man on death row, convicted of killing an up-and-coming comedienne - even though her body was never found. Sharon is working with the lawyer on the appeal's process and soon finds out about the darker side of the victim through her "friends," family and colleagues.
Once again though, Sharon is about the only player in this story who doesn't get on my nerves. She makes an observation later in the book that she's sick of the case, and everyone involved and I was like, "Girl, I know how you feel." The victim's roommate especially was literally the most annoying character on the face of the Earth. I also wasn't terribly wild about a relationship choice Sharon makes in this book. Frankly, she should know better.
Solid murder mystery with familiar characters, Sharon McCone and friends. Muller infuses just enough personal interaction with the mystery details to make the reader care about the characters.
Alas. I was not able to lose myself in this adventure, but instead I was wincing at a lot of emotional dissonance. While the story beguiles for awhile, and the energy level of the story runs hot, and Sharon McCone's life and personal demons engage, I admit to feeling a tad unable to accept the denouement.
I think if you are going to write about a comedy club there should be more detail about that business to make the club come alive, but this story could have been about an ordinary restaurant and its employees. Plus, my impression of comedians is that they can be dysfunctional, bitter and attention seeking, but I never thought of them as empty blanks as they are in this plot.
Several characters did not ultimately respond in a believable manner to me, particularly Amy, Lisa, Tracy and even McCone. I could not see Tracy Kostakos going out with Marc Emmons, a real colorless jerk. The drama queen Amy did not seem like someone who would sit around an apartment for a year living under the shadow of her roommate's drama for a year, and bury herself in Tracy's life. Lisa McIntyre's behavior was a weird combination of lifeless concern for herself.
Most of the suspects and the victim's loved ones turn out to be stupid people - either too stupid to live or shallow as a shadow, and all of that goes double for the victim herself, Tracy Kostakos. That does not turn me off a book, but it meant the story had to hook me on some other interesting element. Instead, I slowly began to not care about discovering who done it.
Sharon McCone was assigned to Bobby Foster’s case. She is to learn why he confessed to killing Tracy Kostakos, a crime he didn’t commit. Tracy is known by family and friends as a good girl but Sharon McCone learns the truth about Tracy Kostakos and why she was murdered and by whom. Laura Hicks does a good job in storytelling.
Marcia Muller's San Francisco detective Sharon McCone begins her ninth adventure visiting a man on death row, a client for All Souls — the law coop McCone works for. Barely 20, Bobby Fisher has been convicted of murder in a 'no body' case. McCone's charge is to retrace the case and see if there is enough evidence to get Fisher at least a new trial.
And so it begins. McCone is a dogged investigator and manages to find old secrets, new clues and plenty of suspicion and the story would be a good one if I could only like McCone a bit more. I know, I should be a bit more understanding: she's a liberated female! she can stand on her own two feet and handle assaults as well as the mysteries! And when need be, she can walk away from an unfulfilling relationship.
But I really don't like the woman. There is something grating to be reading a mystery and the main character pops up with "I'm part native American" as if it was a vital clue, even when it isn't (and by the five book in the series, I could care less). Then she also seems to fall into and out of bed and attraction with an assortment of men that wander in and out of the books. I know, in many mysteries the male characters seem to jump in and out of beds with nubile young women, but I expect my female PIs to be a little less cavalier about the matter of love and sex and developing a lasting relationship. Frankly, as a modern independent woman why can't she be attracted and not jump into anything for a while?
At first it was a detective that McCone was attracted to — and he to her. They have a prickly relationship which I would have figured would be good for that off-again, on-again give and take through the series. But author Muller dropped him quickly and now he is only an occasional character with few lines or action. Next, Muller has McCone take up with a radio DJ — OK, quirky but could be a good side story to the series — but there doesn't seem much to the relationship and it lasts for a couple of books, then drops like a hot potato.
In this book McCone is supposedly recovering from the ending of that relationship but still is attracted to a potential suspect and the father of the murder victim. I don't see the attraction but I also don't like the suspension of ethics in the move to start a relationship with the grieving and married professor while still conducting the investigation. With little in the way of attraction other than both are lonely. I actually hope that in future stories, he doesn't return.
Admittedly I am no romantic and we've all read news stories of attorneys who have fallen for their clients, prison guards with their prisoners, etc. But it just doesn't feel right to have this distraction going on — friendships are important for the character and a relationship that grows to 'will they?' can keep a story line running. A psychologist (which happens to be the field of the latest McCone lover) could probably look at the character development over the previous books and come up with a woman who has the internal fight to stay independent but still have love and that's why she doesn't seem to be happy alone or when she is with someone. But I'm not a psychologist and I wish that Marcia Muller would have created a strong, independent woman who is looking for a long-time relationship but take her time to find the right one, for all the right reasons.
Will it stop me from reading more of the series. Well I have a box full of the series and as I say, the mysteries are pretty darn good. And I still have home that the character develops into someone far more interesting.
Tracy Kostakos is dead! Or is she? Crack Addict Bobby Foster is on death row in San Quentin convicted of her murder. But what if Tracy is alive?
Sharon McCone takes this case because the facts don’t add up, and many of them intrigue her. Tracy was an up-and-coming standup comedienne whose work at a San Francisco comedy club gained notoriety by the day.
So, maybe somebody killed Tracy, but the facts as McCone digs them up point to someone other than Bobby Foster as the killer.
I enjoyed this plotline. That said, I get tired of watching McCone bed hop her way through her cases. She joins the ranks of Anna Pigeon as female sleuths I’d rather not deal with because I don’t have a lot of regard for them personally. But she does solve the case; never mind that her heart is in shambles.
There is a lot to like here, and an inventive plot rolls well for the first half of the book or a bit more. Tracy Kostakos is the best character Muller has created to date, which is a plus for the central character in the story. As usual, the rest of the characters are fairly thinly sketched out, especially most of the men.
But the books becomes increasingly complicated and unravels towards the end to the point where I was less interested in "who done it" that I would have expected. And the story wanders on beyond its climax more than I would have preferred.
This is better than the first few in the series, but less satisfying than "There's Something in a Sunday" which precedes it. In neither case, by the way, does the title seem to relate well to what is in the book.
Tons of suspects and a missing body, found -- that is, then isn't then is THE body. Wow! Lots of twists and turns in this one. Fortunately one who didn't do it is Sharon's new squeeze. Bye-bye Don (and Greg), hello George. Really! I had totally forgotten Geroge from when I read this 23 years ago. :-) Willing to bet he doesn't last long..... So happy to be rereading this series.
Somehow, I missed this book as I was reading through the series, but I'm glad I've gone back to it now. It also introduces at least one character from the later books that I'd wondered where he'd come from.
I like like the balance that continues to be present in the series. Sharon is a tough, no-nonsense investigator, but can still be insecure at times and needing others. This was a good solid whodonit.
A dark story about making it in stand up comedy in L.A. and the Bay Area. McCone's investigation even takes her to Reseda, where I grew up. "Reseda. That's----"L.A. area, in the San Fernando Valley..." p. 158
That is my favorite McCone to date. Talk about twists and turns. I damn near got whiplash! and the New Year's party was filled with cameos from prior characters. Very good!
I read this more or less in a day, as a neighbor told me part of it was set in my neighborhood. Not a terribly flattering part of the story, or my neighborhood, but overall an entertaining, predictable read.
The Shape of Bread, by Marcia Muller, a-minus, Narrated by Laura Hicks,Produced by Audiogo, Downloaded from audible.com.
This is no. 10 of the Sharon McCone mysteries, and we’re still at All Souls Legal Cooperative-my dream place to live and work. Sharon is asked by one of the lawyers to investigate a case. He is handling the last appeal for Bobby Fisher, who is on death row for a murder he confessed to but may not actually have committed. He was a parking valet for a small-time comedy club whose star performer, Tracy Kostakos was first assumed to have been kidnapped from the club, and then ultimately considered dead. Her body had never been found. Bobby was a good friend of hers and some people alleged they had been arguing the night she disappeared. But as Sharon investigates, she finds that there are a lot of people involved in this comedy club who have their own agendas and had reasons to hate Tracy. It’s an excellent book with many twists and turns. Very good.
Always like this series and it still does not disappoint me. Good story. Keeps you interested.
Bobby Foster, car-hop at the chic Cafe Comedie, is going to the gas chamber. He's already confessed to the murder of Tracy Kostakos, the club's rising star. But two years after the crime, Tracy's body is still missing and Bobby's confession is full of holes. All Souls Legal Cooperative's final appeal sends San Francisco's #1 P.I. Sharon McCone behind the footlights into the super-charged arena of anxious club owners and aspiring young hopefuls...into the fractured world of Tracy's privileged family and the mind of a young comedienne who was not the good little girl they thought they knew...into a labyrinth of death and deception where someone will kill to laugh last and get away with murder
Sharon McCone series - Bobby Foster, car-hop at the Cafe Comedie, is going to the gas chamber. He's confessed to the murder of Tracy Kostakos. But two years after the crime, Tracy's body is still missing and Bobby's confession is full of holes. All Souls Legal Cooperative sends Sharon McCone into the arena of anxious club owners and aspiring young hopefuls...into the world of Tracy's family and the mind of a young comedienne who was not the good little girl they thought they knew...into a labyrinth of death and deception where someone will kill to laugh last and get away with murder.
I see a lot of improvement in the author's writing style from even a couple of stories ago. She has improved her characterization and her plots have gotten both more involved and more believable. Not that this story was perfect. There was at least one major hole and the solution to the mystery was not solvable from the clues at hand. It was more a last-man-standing solution. The hole was the police missing a major and what should have been obvious clue, another case of them being just a bit too stupid. Still, the plot was good, the characters were much improved and the solution was acceptable. A very good read.
This was book nine in the McCone mystery series and the best yet. Muller laid out bread crumbs leading to the murderer, only to snatch away the prize at the last moment. She did this numerous times. When she finally did reveal the murderer it was a total surprise (at least to me). I thought he was way too stupid to have done the deed. The reasoning behind it made sense though.
Muller also spent time in the book delving into the personal dramas of the All Souls employees. It was interesting getting a fuller view of the characters.