Gay Chicago police detective Paul Turner and his partner, Detective Buck Fenwick, pull all the sensitive homicide cases - the ones with political ramifications or intense media coverage, where careful handling and a quick resolution are required. All his years on the force, however, haven't prepared Turner for what he faces when male super-model Cullom Furyk plunges off the top of a major downtown hotel. With one streetside witness claiming that Furyk was pushed to his death, Turner and Fenwick have to reconstruct the crime and discover what actually happened, while the press hounds them for results. But Furyk led a messy personal and professional life. Some say he was preparing to cancel his lucrative exclusive arrangement with one Chicago fashion house to work with its main rival, while others insist that wasn't true. And on the personal side, several men claim to have had recent affairs or to have maintained an ongoing relationship with Furyk. All that Turner knows for sure is that someone - probably - murdered the model and the city is filled with people who had ample motive and opportunity. And if Turner and Fenwick don't solve this case - and quickly - then someone will have gotten away with murder.
Mark Richard Zubro is an American mystery novelist. He lives in Mokena, Illinois and taught 8th grade English at Summit Hill Jr. High in nearby Frankfort Square, Illinois.
Zubro writes bestselling mysteries set in Chicago and the surrounding Cook County area, which are widely praised as fast-paced, with interesting plots and well-rounded, likeable characters. His novels feature gay themes, and Zubro is himself gay.
His longest running series features high school teacher Tom Mason, and Tom's boyfriend, professional baseball player Scott Carpenter. The other series Zubro is known for is the Paul Turner mysteries, which are about a Chicago police detective. The books are a part of the Stonewall Inn Mystery series, published by St. Martin's Press. Zubro won a Lambda Literary Award for Best Gay Men's Mystery for his book A Simple Suburban Murder.
I am the author of twenty-four mystery novels and five short stories. My book A Simple Suburban Murder won the Lambda Literary Award for Best Gay Men's mystery. I also wrote a thriller, Foolproof, with two other mystery writers, Jeanne Dams and Barb D'Amato. I taught eighth graders English and reading for thirty-four years and was president of the teachers' union in my district from 1985 until 2006. I retired from teaching in 2006 and now spend my time reading, writing, napping, and eating chocolate. My newest book, Another Dead Republican, is my thirteenth book in the Tom and Scott series which features as main characters, a gay school teacher and his lover, a professional baseball player. One of the keys in my mysteries is you do not want to be a person who is racist, sexist, homophobic, or a school administrator. If you are any of those, it is likely you are the corpse, or, at the least, it can be fairly well guaranteed that bad things will happen to you by the end. And if in my books you happen to be a Republican and/or against workers' rights, it would be far better if you did not make a habit of broadcasting this. If you did, you're quite likely to be a suspect, or worse.
When a model plummets to his death, Paul must discover the murderer. Everyone turned into an absolute bantersaurus in this instalment, and I wasn't a fan because it felt so sudden and different to the books before. I guess it felt fairly out of character for many of them, and majorly out of character for Paul. But then I wonder whether with a series like this, and this genre, is it more typical for authors to switch up their characterisation a few books in? I don't know, but it didn't work for me, basically. It got better in the second half when Ben gets involved. I wish there had been more time with Paul's family. Kiiiind of losing interest at this point. Might go back to Tom and Scott for some unhinged amateur sleuthing lol
This is the first Zubro I've read, though I've had a few on my shelf for years. I'm 2/3 of the way through it and have lost interest. It's an interesting plot, and lots of great insider knowledge of the fashion industry is entertaining. There's lots of banter between the two cop/protagonists, but it's not good enough or clever enough to compensate for the flat writing. Don't know if he writes better in other books but after this one I'm not inclined to try them out. Sadly, most of the gay mysteries I've read are also victims of less than great writing. Not all, but most, and that's disappointing.
In this 5th Paul Turner mystery we find Detectives Turner & Fenwick investigating who pushed a high fashion male model off the ledge of a penthouse balcony to his death. The model, was a enigma, he seem to float from lover to lover, though highly paid he had no home. The suspects are many, including the fashion company owner where the model had an exclusive contract, the rival company who wanted the young man to model for them, and various lovers who wanted the young man's as moe then a quickie. This is a fast and fun read. I lover the easy going partnership of Turner & Fenwick they get each others humor and back each other up.Just a good series!