Cold and Pure and Very Dead: A Karen Pelletier Mystery Book + PRICE WATCH * Amazon pricing is not included in price watch

Cold and Pure and Very Dead: A Karen Pelletier Mystery Book

Karen Pelletier, assistant professor of English at prestigious Enfield College in Massachusetts, has opened a can of 44-year-old worms by telling New York Times writer Marty Katz that, in her opinion, Oblivion Falls was the greatest literary work of the past century. Like Grace Metalious's 1956 cause célèbre, Peyton Place, Oblivion Falls blew the steamy lid off a respectable New England college town, made ground-breaking strides up the bestseller lists, and made a brilliant if briefly lit star of its author, the now reclusive Mildred Deakin. And now, thanks to Pelletier's intentionally provocative throwaway answer to a snooty writer's question, Oblivion Falls is back in the limelight: an Oprah's Book Club selection, at the top of the Times bestseller list, and one of Amazon.com's top 10. None of which explains why Marty Katz was found in the driveway of goat farmer Milly Finch, shot dead by a 30-30 Winchester. "Re-e-e-ally?'" This was strange, even tragic, but so far I couldn't see any "circumstances" that linked the killing to me. "That's too bad," I said, then added, inanely, "he wrote so well." "Did he?" the pale lieutenant asked, and exchanged another significant look with her subordinate. "Well, so did she, obviously. Write well, I mean. We haven't released this information to the general public yet, Professor, but a long time ago Milly Finch was a famous novelist. She published under the name of Mildred Deakin." And with that, Pelletier and her longtime partner-in-solving-crime, Massachusetts State Police Lieutenant Charlie Piotrowski, are off. Nicely paced, plotted, and peopled with distractions romantic and decidedly otherwise (from campus newcomers Jake Fenton, the roguish author-in-residence, and Ralph Emerson Brooke, the fifties hipster sitting uneasily in the endowed Chair of Literary Studies, to the well-limned Milly Finch herself), this fourth entry in the Pelletier series may please newcomers most. Good as this is, Dobson's regulars have come to expect even more from Professor Pelletier. --Michael HudsonRead More

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  • Product Description

    English professor Karen Pelletier is well known for her provocative manner and iconoclastic opinions, so it's no surprise that she perversely cites a commercial novel from the 1950s when asked to named the greatest book of the twentieth century. The only work by Mildred Deakin, who disappeared from public view shortly after its publication, Satan Mills quickly becomes the hottest book around. It's the center of contentious arguments in academic circles, climbs onto The New York Times bestseller list, and receives the coveted honor of being an Oprah Book Club selection. At the height of the frenzy, a reporter who discovers the reclusive author in rural upstate New York is found dead in her driveway. Could Deakin have been so protective of her privacy that she'd shoot someone to protect it?

    Called in to help with the investigation, Karen learns that the scandalous happenings at the heart of Satan Mills were more autobiographical than its attractive young author wanted anyone to know. The intrepid professor deploys all her literary and investigative skills in an all-out effort to exonerate the embattled older woman and restore her peaceful existence. Detailed with Dobson's lethally witty pen, Karen's latest adventure is at once a deftly told mystery and a delightful debunking of polemical academics and pretentious intellectual windbags.

  • 0385493401
  • 9780385493406
  • Joanne Dobson
  • 1 January 2001
  • Doubleday Books
  • Hardcover (Book)
  • 272
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