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Bootlegger's Daughter

Deborah Knott Mysteries Series, Book 1

#1 in series

Audiobook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
With a steamy Southern plot and a sassy new heroine, this Edgar Award winning novel debuts an exceptional new series. Attorney Deborah Knott is North Carolina's answer to V.I. Warshawski, a legal sleuth with a knack for sniffing out the most baffling crimes. Deborah has just done the unthinkable-entered the heated race for judge of old-boy-ruled Colleton County. The only female candidate, she's busy reeling in voters and giving campaign speeches. There couldn't be a worse time for Gayle Whitehead to beg Deborah to investigate the 18-year-old, unsolved murder of Gayle's mother, Janie. Gayle wants the busy attorney to poke around for any new clues the police may have missed all these years. Unlikely, thinks Deborah; until she discovers that not all the details of Janie's case made it out of confidential police files. Filled with the patter of Southern voices and populated with a cast of colorful characters, Bootlegger's Daughter expertly unwinds a funny, cunningly-crafted tale of mystery and deceit in North Carolina's backwoods.
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    • Publisher's Weekly

      May 4, 1992
      Maron's ( Past Imperfect ) series launch introduces attorney Deborah Knott, the daughter of an infamous North Carolina bootlegger, in an atmospheric adventure mixing Southern politics and a mysterious killing`unsolved murder' in next sentence . While Deb campaigns for a district court judgeship, 18-year-old Gayle Whitehead asks her to investigate the unsolved murder of her mother, Janie, which took place when Gayle was an infant. The girl wants Deb, who knows the locals of Cotton Grove, to ask around and see if she can find clues the police might have missed. Deb visits Michael Vickery, the gay son of Cotton Grove's retired doctor and owner of the property where Janie's body was found. She discovers long-kept secrets, learning that Janie had a roving eye and that a lesbian friend and her lover had made overtures to Janie a week before the murder.sentence ok?see my revisions yes, fine But not until another death occurs does Deb begin to close in on the truth. Filled with good-ole-boy patter and detailed local color, the story flows smoothly, and if it lacks suspense, Maron's appealing characterizations and her knowing eye for family relationships more than compensate. Mystery Guild alternate; author tour.

    • AudioFile Magazine
      This Southern plot yields a tale of mystery, deception, drollery and a touch of feminism. In this first Deborah Knott mystery, the relentless pursuer of truth and justice in a murder investigation makes enemies and allies simultaneously. C.J. Critt yields a believable performance as an ambitious Southern woman in an old-fashioned town of good old boys. She doesn't display a great deal of emotion but holds back in a reserved fashion, a tactic that proves to be accurate for Knott's character. Readers find themselves "slowing down" as Critt performs in a more slow-paced Southern style. In addition, Critt exhibits the same sarcastic humor that Knott possesses. B.J.P. (c)AudioFile, Portland, Maine

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  • English

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