Shelley Singer is the author of a dozen published novels and many short stories. One of her mysteries was nominated for the prestigious Shamus Award of the Private Eye Writers of America. She has written mysteries, science fiction, and mainstream fiction. Singer began her working life as a reporter with UPI in Chicago. During a checkered and mercifully brief journalism career, she met such luminaries as Nikita Khrushchev, Jimmy Hoffa, Xavier Cugat, Mrs. Billy Graham, Martin Luther King, Jr., and a condemned killer on death row. She never met Joseph Stalin. She teaches fiction writing classes and does manuscript consulting.
Book 4: Spit in the Ocean — 30 chapters Shelley Singer (Aug 14-16, 2018)
Jake’s friend Chloe asks him (and Rosie) to look into a sperm bank heist. Once there, a terrible storm breaks out and a woman who worked at the sperm bank dies. Was it an accident or something more sinister?
I don’t know if it was the sporadic ability to read this story or if it was the writing style, but plot had a hurry up and wait with a ill foreboding feeling to it. There were two seemingly unrelated stories here: the sperm bank and the death in the ocean. Ms. Singer did admirable in putting them both together.
The plot was very interested me, with the title working well into the end. The author continues to develop these characters; they may have the same MO, but they continue to grow.
Still, the author spent a lot more time than needed on filler parts that didn’t contribute to the story at all. And some elements were annoyingly repeated more than twice. Tightening and refining via editing and structure of those points would have made a more enjoyable reading experience. (Although I need to remember that this was written ~30 years ago.)
Jake Samson and Rosie Vicente travel north to little Wheeler, California, where the North Coast Sperm Bank has hired them to investigate a break-in and robbery. The case quickly becomes more interesting when an employee of the bank dies during a storm.
Posing, as usual, as journalists, Jake and Rosie work together on the cases with local police, who appreciate the help. Local residents, though, resent the presence of nosy writers from San Francisco, making it difficult to penetrate the complicated secrets of the little community. This is a puzzling small-town mystery with a colorful cast of characters.
Fourth in the series. Jake and Rosie go up to the small coastal town of Wheeler, California, in the beautiful region bear Mendocino, to investigate a sperm bank robbery that reveals many small town secrets. Wonderful use of the series' connecting motif of poker references (Jake usually plays at least one of his weekly poker nights in each book) to also make a geographical reference to an area of land with nice homes that becomes important during a bad storm in the novel.
The characters are good, the mystery is good, and the wrap ups are always top notch when the author brings all the clues together. The romance part of it is forced and skimmed over to the degree it could just as well be left out and not really missed. Simple sexual tension between characters would do more for me as a reader than 'oh, they got lucky, let's move on'. Give it your all or not at all. Still, a good little mystery with some fun characters.
I think this may be my second time reading this, some 30 years later. It's a quick, easy read. I enjoyed the plot and the cast of characters. I found myself chuckling out loud a few times. Definitely will seek out other books by this author. Loved the snarkiness.
A grisly murder during a stormy night. Everyone is suspect. But how does that tie into the theft from the bank vault – sperm bank, that is? I picked up this book because my curiosity was piqued by its unusual premise, and I’m glad I did! It was an entertaining read, and I learned more about sperm banks than I ever thought there was to know!
An easy read that runs along smoothly, and again the characters are fleshed out nicely. I found hard to put down for long without picking it up again. I'm afraid I wouldn't want to live there though.