Amateur sleuth Claire Montrose gets more than she bargained for when she attends her twenty-year high-school reunion and a secret admirer sends her a heart-shaped box marked with death, and she must uncover an elusive killer. Reprint.
I write mysteries and thrillers. I live in Portland, Oregon with my family.
If you've read one of my books, I would love to hear from you. Hearing from readers makes me eager to keep writing.
When I was 12, I sent a short story about a six-foot tall frog who loved peanut butter to Roald Dahl, the author of Charlie and the Chocolate Factory. He liked it so much he arranged to have it published in an international children's magazine.
My dream of writing went dormant until I was in my 30s, working at a corporate job, and started writing books on the side. Those first few years are now thankfully a blur. Now I'm very lucky to make a living doing what I love. I have written 27 novels for adults and teens, with more on the way. My books have been on the New York Times bestseller lists, gotten starred reviews, been picked for Booksense, translated into seven languages, been named to state reading lists, won the Anthony award and won the Oregon Book Award.
#3 in the Claire Montrose mystery series. Claire is attending her Minor High School class of ’79’s 20th reunion.
She reluctantly decides to attend taking her boyfriend with her as a sort of status symbol. Her high school is the stereotypical clique filled school with the head cheerleader being the in kid. Claire was smart, but didn’t fit into any of the groups coming from a low income single mother family so can’t afford college and becomes a screener of vanity license plates in Portland. She is one of several women at the reunion who received a hand made heart shaped box and the first night of the reunion the head cheerleader is found murdered in the parking lot. She is not the traditional female wife who solves mysteries in these types of mysteries. She’s somewhat reluctant and is able to see things and clues others are missing.
Read this right after Circles of Confusion, wanting to give April Henry an opportunity to improve her writing because I like to support local authors. Reading the descriptions of fictional Oregon settings, I realized what a tough job it is to keep everything authentic and consistent. I hope that Henry will keep honing her skills as she keeps writing and getting published.
Publishers Weekly Amateur sleuth Claire Montrose continues to beguile but is underutilized in her third appearance, following Square in the Face (2000) and the Agatha- and Anthony-Award-nominated Circles of Confusion (1999). At the 20th reunion for the Minor (Ore.) High School Class of '79, held at Ye Olde Pioneer Village Theme Park, some things haven't changed. Cindy is still a tease and a flirt, even if she does have a husband in tow. Sawyer was a dreamboat teacher; now he's a dreamboat politician and the guest of honor. Wade was strange then, but he's stranger now and was even institutionalized for a spell. Dick was a geek. Now he owns a high-speed modem company worth a fortune. He's still a geek. Claire was thin and shy and poor and smart. She's less poor now and the presence of Dante, her handsome boyfriend, ought to make her feel more confident. But reunions have a way of resurrecting old insecurities. Several women at the western-themed opening night receive mysterious presents: small, handcarved boxes. Cindy gets one before she dies in the theme park parking lot. The nondescript Kyle, a cop and a member of the returning class, does most of the sleuthing. Alert readers will ignore the slew of overly obvious suspects and quickly arrive at the true identity of the killer.
At least this was more of a mystery. Only read these if bored. She (henry) hasn't even picked up the heat with Claire and Dante. It's like an old movie. Lights dim, Lights come up.
Finally with this one, I liked the book enough to give it a third star. Claire and Dante are together (yay!) for Claire's 20th high school reunion back in Minor, OR. And we meet again Cindy Sanchez who was a secondary character in the previous mystery, Square in the Face.
Claire and Dante are on the scene when the first and then second bodies are discovered although the reader has access to the knowledge that Claire's old schoolmate, now the chief of police, has via his interviews with everyone who was in the vicinity of the first body.
Aside from a stint of dressing up in the school mascot costume in order to eavesdrop on conversations at one of the reunion events, Claire figures out whodunit without any TSTL moments.
I liked this book. It was enjoyable reading. It's about the main character going to her 20th high school reunion and a murder mystery ensues. The who done it was good. It's interesting to see what has happened to people after 20 years. Never went to a school reunion.
Contains a memorable quote: "She tried out a 'come-hither' look, but in the mirror she appeared simply to be a woman in search of her bifocals. Had she moved from being too young to being too old, skipping over the vital middle part of being just right?"