When a fifth cousin twice removed calls Bay Tanner - a young, recently widowed, financial consultant - from the Beaufort County Jail, it's no accident. Mercer Mary Prescott spent a lot of time and trouble locating Bay on the family tree, and she needs more than bail out of the relationship. What she's really after is a secret she's not willing to reveal-yet. But when Bay generously takes Mercer back to the family mansion of Presqu'isle, she finds that this distant kin comes with a lot of personal baggage-and some very dangerous pursuers. Before Bay can help straighten out Mercer's problems, the mousy young woman disappears. Now, Bay begins a desperate hunt for her "shirttail" cousin through the twisted alleys of the past, from Civil War days to a plantation called Perdition House and to one last deadly fight.
Kathy wrote her first story at the age of six, then decided to take a few decades off. She grew up in a small town in northeastern Ohio and attended college in both Ohio and Pennsylvania. For twenty-five years she practiced her profession as an accountant in both public and private practice. In 1994 she and her husband Norman retired to Hilton Head, South Carolina.
Her road to publishing success has taken many twists and turns. She self-published her first Bay Tanner mystery, In For a Penny, in 2001 using the innovative print-on-demand technology. Its success led to an offer from a small, regional publisher who reissued the first novel along with its sequel, And Not a Penny More, on Valentine's Day of 2002. A reprint of both books had to be ordered within six weeks.
Then serendipity struck. An editor for St. Martin's Press, visiting relatives in nearby Beaufort, was introduced to the Bay Tanner mysteries. A month later she called to offer Kathy a hardcover contract. They have since published Perdition House, Judas Island, Resurrection Road, Bishop's Reach and Sanctuary Hill in both hardcover and paperback. The eighth Bay Tanner novel, The Mercy Oak, is slated for release April, 2008.
Kathy is a founding member of Island Writers' Network and serves as treasurer for both the Sisters in Crime National Board and the Southeast Chapter of Mystery Writers of America.
Kathy has been a mentor in the Hilton Head schools and participates as a Friend of Literacy Volunteers of the Lowcountry. When not writing and touring for her books, Kathy and Norman play tennis, share long walks on the beach, and enjoy the lush beauty of the tidal marsh from the decks of their Hilton Head condominium. She has two stepsons and four grandchildren.
Writing a series is tricky. You're developing characters from book to book, but at the same time, each installment needs to stand alone. Finding the right balance between backstory and new action can be a challenge.
Unfortunately, in Perdition House, Kathryn R. Wall doesn't completely succeed in meeting this challenge.
I picked the title at a used book sale, intrigued by the setting and the cover. Indeed, Ms. Wall's evocation of the South Carolina Low Country is one of the book's strengths, and I do love a novel with a strong sense of place. I didn't realize the mystery was the third in a series. Once I started reading, alas, the author wouldn't let me forget this. I found the frequent references to events that had occurred in previous installments distracting rather than enlightening. It would have been sufficient to explain, once, that heroine Bay Tanner's husband had been murdered and that she barely escaped with her own life. I was not likely to forget this; the author did not need to keep reminding me!
The characters in Perdition House are vivid and skillfully drawn, especially the "shirttail cousin" Mercer and Bay's elderly Aunt Eliza. The plot, on the other hand, felt contrived and implausible. The final reveal was just too neat, all the threads unified, all the disparate villains in league. I also detected a note of anti-environmentalist sentiment that grated, though of course every author is entitled to his or her own political opinions.
Perdition House was a sufficiently diverting read for a four hour train trip, but ultimately I found it a bit disappointing.
Being from SC I love reading a story that is set in my part of the world.
Not sure how I feel about the new cousin and wonder if she will show up in future storylines. I'm hoping for a little more heat between Red and Bay & Darnay and Bay. She needs a little more excitement in her life from the men that are there and not the crazies that appear.
This story was a quick and compelling page turner. It is part of a series, but it also works well as a stand alone story. If you like stories about genealogy, the American Civil War, and technical thrillers then this book is a good choice.
Words do not describe how much I hate this book. Lured in by an interesting premise, I waded through what felt like a million pages of mindless description of every bit of minutia of everyday life (do you want to know every item of clothing that everyone wears, what everyone eats, when the heroine uses the restroom, what fast food joint she stops at for two sentences, etc? I sure didn't!). Then there was lots of violence with little mystery (what mystery there is is so easy to solve that you will spend most of the book wishing that they'd just hurry up and get to the ending), a truly bizarre and hard to believe plot...it was one of those train wrecks I just couldn't put down because I was curious if the ending might redeem it somewhat. Instead, right near the ending you get racist stereotypes of Native Americans! Except for the heroine and her newfound cousin, none of the characters have much substance. The reader is supposed to be very concerned about a character who never speaks in the book and who spends the entire book injured and/or unconscious. It just doesn't work that way!
I am never reading anything by this author again and wish I could get a few hours of my life back to read a decent book with.
I am enjoying this series and agree with some of the previous comments. There was a lot going on in this book and if the recap had not occurred, the reader would have been lost. I live in South Carolina and I enjoy the author's descriptions of areas near to me. I'm still enjoying reading a book where GPS is considered new and a pay phone is needed. :) I just hope Bay can have some time off from the violence in her life.
Slow to get started but it gets better. I have read a number of the Bay Tanner books and always enjoy the Hilton Head and Beaufort locals. This one also involves the Savannah River Site, just outside Aiken where we live and where my husband worked for 38 years. The ending is not very believable if you know the Site well, but it is a fun novel.
I am enjoying this series. Interesting characters and stories. Quick reads ... and I like that I know the area now that we spend so much time in Hilton Head. I can visualize the action. Beach reads ... but well written ones.
I will probably read the remainder of the series as I appreciate the Lowcountry setting. I sometimes found it difficult to identify with the main character, and would have enjoyed fewer characters with deeper development...and more details about Perdition House itself.
This is the only one in the series that I have read. As a stand-alone book it was enjoyable. I didn't understand the references to her past lover, but I guess books one and two feature him.
Kathryn Wall is a really good writer. I enjoyed reading a novel set in my hometown. The plot was good, too, with twists and turns, that all came together in the end.
This is the 3rd book in the Bay Tanner series that I've read, the others come later in the series, so this was a nice chance for me to see her earlier sorta speak. First all, I like how Mrs. Wall write her stories, except when she uses a word that makes me need a dictionary or thesaurus to understand, and not bragging here, but that is rare for me, so I would have to say she uses words that are not common everyday words. That being said, it really doesn't detract from the book, just a small bump. I like this book for several reasons, one the history factor, her dad is one tough man, who doesn't no for an answer. Each of the books could be read out of order and you would not be blind in knowing what is going on, Wall gives you plenty of background in each book, so you understand the dynamics, without having to put a book down and wait to start at the beginning of a series. Like I said, I read 2 later Bay Tanner series books and then this one, I lost nothing from knowing what happens later, trust me.
I took this off my shelves and apparently have had it since at least May 2004 - the binding had not even been cracked. Reading at the cold rainy beach! This is part of the series, #3. You know how I hate to read out of order but it appears another book I brought to read is part of the same series - how convenient. So anyway - they are called The Bay Tanner Mysteries and there are at least 9 of them! Whew! I recommend for light and one day reading.
Sometimes it is not a good idea to answer the phone :-o
Now that Bay has a new twice removed cousin added to her family tree, and one that came with a heavy price paid! It will be interesting to see how she is used in future books in the series.
I enjoyed the twists, the multiple relationships and story lines that kept me interested and alert :-)