I love murder mysteries so I was excited to read another murder mystery for book club. We read Stacey Abrams’ book about a Supreme Court murder last year. That was a fun, fast-paced mystery with lots of complicated twists. However, this book was none of those things. Published in the 80s, it felt very dated with the main detective sticking very closely to many of the detective stereotypes-leering at women, being out of shape, and kind of hard-boiled. The story had a few plot twists but none of them seemed too surprising.
The book begins when one of the law clerks for the Chief Justice is found murdered in the Chief Justice’s chair. Two detectives, Martin Teller and Susanna Pinscher are investigating the crime from two different groups, the police and the Justice Department. They work together to solve the murder. Unfortunately, the murderer was fairly obvious from the get-go and the story lines did nothing to convince me that I was wrong.
Maybe it is the many years of reading murder mysteries that had me so critical of this book. The writing felt as though the author was always trying to tell the reader what was happening instead of the story naturally unfolding in front of the reader. The love scenes between the two detectives felt forced and not believable. And even when she tried to make someone less stereotypical, like having the male detective like opera, it seemed weird and out of character.
Murder mysteries can be delicious to read. This felt like I had to stop rolling my eyes at every turn. For that I give it 2 stars.