Rien ne va plus pour la détective privée Lauren Laurano : après le meurtre de Ruthie, tante de son amie Elissa, et le départ impromptu de sa compagne Kip, voici que réapparaît Charlie West, l'un des deux violeurs qui hantent son passé.
Sandra Scoppettone first emerged as one of the best hard-boiled mystery writers using the name Jack Early for her first three novels that included A Creative Kind of Killer (1984) that won the Shamus Award from the Private Eye Writers of America for best first novel. She had started writing seriously since the age of 18 when she moved to New York from South Orange, New Jersey. Scoppettone in the 1960s collaborated with Louise Fitzhuh and in the 1970s wrote important young adult novels. The Late Great Me depicting teenage alcoholism won an Emmy Award in 1976. Her real name was revealed in the 1990s with the start of a series featuring PI Lauren Laurano. Scoppettone shares her life with writer Linda Crawford.
Page 13 and Kip announces that she is going away for a month. I can smell the cheating already fam.
Note: One of the things I hate the most in this series is that the protagonist often uses irony to get over emotional crises but she does not let other characters be ironic when they emotionally need it, such as on page 19: "It's not catching," he says sarcastically. [...] "Are you very upset?" " You could call it devastated ... but I wouldn't. I suppose I should be. Strange that I'm not." "What are you then?" "As in animal, vegetable, or mineral?" "Stop it." He does this when he doesn't want to deal with things. "Let's see. If I'm not devastated, then I must be something else. Should we name all the things I could be?" "Why are you acting like this?"
He's acting like this because he is a coke addict and lied about it to his lover and his lover couldn't cope with it and left him. Have a heart Lauren, and stop hounding every character like they're in a Confession booth.
Another thing that baffles me is that the author successfully managed to share one of her protagonist's verbal quirks to a wide variety of secondary characters without being edited out. Like "Continue. Shminie" or "See. Shmee." This is a verbal quirk that is first introduced by the protagonist and later found in teenagers a state over as well as New Yorker geriatrics, of any class or cultural background. It is beyond suspension of disbelief.
oh lauren laurano i love you so dearly, even though your morals are tested in this book! out of the entire series, this book made me feel the most - annoyance sometimes, frustration, and pure fear - and i was completely hooked until the last page. i loved it, and i’m so sad that there’s only one book left in the series for me to read!
I appreciated the relationship stuff going on in this book. It isn't your stereotypical beginning or ending of a relationship (although there were threads of both), but rather the hard part, the part that isn't always easy or pretty, but the day-to-day living of life in a relationship.
This is my favorite of the 5 in this series. The relationship between Lauren and Kip is so realistic - amazing dialogues and the usual Laurano wit while solving her case with its twists and turns. Great New York scenes and compelling characters and plot.
Oh, damn, oh, damn, oh damn...I was not happy with the cliffhanger at the end of this one!!!! (truth be told I only like a cliffhanger if I already have the next book, which I don't!) There is so much packed into this juicy mystery!
Well, I knew the momentum of the last book couldn't last. Not only was the mystery lackluster and predictable (it felt like it was taking second fiddle to the protagonists story, which I wouldn't mind as much if it were, y'know...good) and also I HATE THE PROTAGONIST IN THIS BOOK SO MUCH! No wonder her relationship is falling apart! She's extremely self centered, she barely communicates about anything, and OF COURSE YOUR PARTNER IS DISTANT WHEN THEY'RE GRIEVING A FAMILY MEMBER WHO DIED FROM FUCKING AIDS! AND THEN YOU CHEAT ON HER! And then you lie to her about it through the entire book, even when she asks you point blank! AND YOU DON'T TELL HER YOU'RE BEING STALKED EVEN WHEN THE GUY IS LITERALLY IN YOUR GODDAMN HOUSE! WHAT IS WRONG WITH YOU?!
ALSO FUCK YOU, SERIAL MOM RULES
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
This is the latest in the Lauren Laurano mystery. The mystery was good, (and included her infatuation with computers) but what was especially interesting was her personal life—she’s having difficulty with her partner, Kip and while Kip’s away, she also finds herself drawn into a relationship with a younger woman. The ending was a real cliffhanger in that regard.
I love the Lauren Laurano mystery series, and this one does not disappoint. Lauren has been with her therapist partner for several years, and they are in a rough patch. Laurano has another mystery to solve, her police partner becomes out of commission, she's being stalked by the man who raped her many years ago and is now out of prison, and she meets another woman online. Oh oh.
An enjoyable if dated read, especially if you enjoy mysteries that are a bit campy and somewhat predictable. That being said the book is anything but boring, I would definitely recommend as a fun read
I was completely caught unaware by the final three paragraphs. That alone makes me need to know more about this universe - but I will have to wait a while and read the first book in the series.
This book had me on edge from the moment Alex was introduced! I think I was more interested in Mrs Laurano's affair then the case at hand. A very attachable book I didn't want to put down
What fun reading a book set thirty years ago. A lesbian couple, really slow computers, dial up modems. Being sixty, I remember this time. Amazing any crimes were solved back then.