Disgraced former judge and uncoventional sleuth Ellis Portal is recruited by the Toronto police to catch the killer of a famed film director and to find the victim's missing teenage daughter. Reprint.
Rosemary Aubert, B.A., M.A., C.Cri is the internationally-acclaimed author of the Ellis Portal mystery series. She is the author of five romance novels published around the world and of poems, interviews, articles and reviews over several decades of writing. She has taught workshops from coast to coast in Canada and the United States and is a frequent guest lecturer at colleges, universities, writers' groups and conferences. Rosemary believes that anyone can be a writer if he or she is willing make full use of his or her talent, imagination and ability to work hard.
I loved this book. It's been a few months since I read the preceding book in the series, so some of the details had faded from my memory.
I loved the characters, I loved the writing, the story was ok and the Toronto locales were introduced in a pleasant and familiar way, not in an annoying way, such as I've written 100 words, so now let's add a name for local interest. I hope this series reached a larger audience than just a Canadian/Toronto market. I put this up with Louise Penny's stories...maybe better?
I'll look for the next book in the series and hope Rosemary Aubert is still out there writing.
I always have a weakness for books: set in areas that I've lived in/near that are well written that read "real" that provoke thought & reflection & this book was no exception.
Thoroughly enjoyable, with an underlying sense of hope. Brilliant.
Ex-judge Ellis Portal, now homeless and destitute in Toronto, is asked by police during investigation of a murder to assist in the search for the missing daughter of the victim, who has disappeared, because of his connections with the homeless community in the city. He asks his friends and fellow homeless for information and goes into the Toronto underground, abandoned buildings, and caves in the cliffside and anywhere he suspects the girl is hiding. Most of the storyline is about his interactions with the homeless, their hopelessness, and the gritty underbelly of the city. He finally finds the girl in the last 16 pages and uncovers the details of the murder, but it turns out sad and unsatisfying.
In a word....boring! This book is quite short, at 250 pages. I simply could not enjoy the characters, the story slogged along, but I did feel the pull that it would get better, so I finished it. What can you say about a book where, 9 pages away from the end of the book, and a gun is being pointed at our hero, when you can put the book down and walk away and do something else! Oh dear. Well I finished it, and it wasn't awful... so 2 stars.
A former judge and street person, Ellis Portal is asked to assist the police to find Carrie, the missing fifteen year old daughter of a film director, who was murdered in public during the Toronto Film Festival. Carrie, who had a history of running away from home since she was nine years old, is believed to have returned to the streets after witnessing her father's murder. Rosemary Aubert's use of words when describing areas of Toronto, is similar to Margaret Atwood, as readers who have walked past the venues described will mentally visualize the scene. The book was pleasant to read, but not a page-turner, as the sense of mystery and suspense seemed to be lacking.