We intentionally sought out Nancy Pickard after being well pleased by a short story of hers in a mystery anthology. Noting that she is probably best known for her 10-book Jenny Cain series, we picked to try the first of the ten, “Generous Death”, published in 1984, with the set ending in 1996.
Unfortunately, almost everything disappointed – with the word amateurish coming to mind over and over. Cain has the odd role as director of a charitable foundation, and amateur sleuth (more or less). When on three straight days, the wealthiest three people in her small Massachusetts town of Port Frederick are found dead, with Cain involved in finding the bodies, in any normal story several police forces would be out in mass with such high-visibility deaths almost certainly the handicraft of some sort of serial killer.
Not herein, with merely one local cop, who just happens to interest Cain romantically, pursuing the matter, with Cain supplying ideas and private efforts along the way. At the end, the culprits are discovered, and, conveniently for we readers, spend several book-end chapters explaining the how, what, and why – as apparently the bulk of the novel was inadequate to do so.
We found the mystery poorly crafted and implausible. We found the over-the-top introduction by Carolyn Hart, apparently a friend/colleague of the author, a totally unwarranted high-expectation setter; nor was the author’s somewhat lengthy afterward, written several years after the set had taken off, little more than back-patting.
So much for having discovered a promising new-to-us author – no wonder this set apparently died a natural death, having not graciously aged, two decades ago.