When Dido Hoare, antiquarian bookseller and single mother, receives a frantic call for help in the middle of the night, she rushes to her friend (and nanny's) side. Dido has no idea that she is about to enter a world where no one is what they appear to be and there is danger all around. Dido arrives at Phyllis's apartment building to find that the lights in the hallway have all been shattered and that the apartment has clearly been burglarized. There is no sign of Phyllis anywhere and when Dido calls out her name she finds that Phyllis had been locked in the closet. Dido frees her and the trouble really begins. Why did the burglars give Phyllis a phone to use? Why didn't they steal anything valuable-like the television or some jewelry? The only response that Phyllis gives to these questions is that Frank, her husband, told her to call him if anything should happen there while he was gone. What was Frank, an account and jailbird, expecting to happen? And where is he anyway---is it his body the police just found in a local park? Unaware that any harm has come to Frank, the women go about cleaning up the apartment. Two men posing as police officers show up and start asking questions. Phyllis recognizes one of the men from the night before and realizes that they are back looking for whatever they were after. Clearly the case is more than Dido can handle, but she can't tear herself away-not even when her father, Barnabas, and an inspector, Paul Grant, warn her how much danger she is in. As Dido continues her search for answers she is led to Lal Fisher, Frank's sister, and to other dangerous situations throughout London. Will Dido find all the answers before Ben, her son, has to grow up without a mother?
Dido needs a nanny for her son, Ben and Phyllis Digby is perfect for the job. But a frantic middle of the night phone call from Phyllis sends Dido rushing to her rescue. Then Phyllis's husband Frank is murdered. Frank was an accountant with a gangster father and a missing gold shipment. "Road Kill" picks up the pace of this great series as Paul Grant, Dido's short-time married lover is suspended from Scotland Yard for helping her discover who killed Frank and locked Phyllis in a closet while their apartment was trashed. The clues are there but super sleuth you must be to arrive at a conclusion before the story ends. A delightful read. Nash Black, author of "Sins of the Fathers" and "Travelers."
Road Kill
Published by Thriftbooks.com User , 24 years ago
This is my first Dido Hoare mystery, and I enjoyed it immensely. The novel is tautly paced and to the point; and Marianne Macdonald does a wonderful job at conveying to the reader the sense of urgency and frustration that Dido et al feel from being alternately harrassed by bent ex-policemen and thugs, and from being used and left out-of-the-loop by the investigating police.When Dido goes to the aid of her nanny, Phyllis, she little expects to be caught up in an old bullions robbery from the 1980s involving mobsters and bent poicemen. First Phyllis's apartment is ransacked but nothing is taken except an old computer. And when the police arrive the next morning to investigate the burgulary, Phyllis recognise them as the burgulars form the previous night. Then Phyllis's husband Frankie is found murdered, and it is revealed that Frankie's father was once the head of a powerful criminal gang that was involved in the Hatton Carriers bullion robbery. On top of it all Dido's policeman friend, Paul Grant, is suspended from duty. Rumour is that he is bent, but Dido knows it is because he came to her aid. What exactly is going on?This was a really fun read. The mystery was smoothly written and each plot twist was nicely piled on so that you could actually feel the tension mounting with each new revelation. A very nice mystery to curl up with and enjoy, esp on rainy nights.
Excellent storytelling
Published by Thriftbooks.com User , 24 years ago
On a back street in central London is located Dido Hoare' Antiquarian Books and Prints. The shop is the business and home of a single thirtyish woman and her child. She receives some help from her father and a nanny Phyllis Digby who is more of a friend.When Phyllis asks her employer for help, Dido immediately takes her son and goes to her friend's home. There she finds lights systematically broken and the door ajar. Dido finds Phyllis locked inside a closet. The frightened woman claims three polite men placed her inside the closet, but thoughtfully left her with a cell phone. Surprisingly, nothing seems stolen and the only rooms disturbed are her husband's den and their bedroom. Obviously the trio were seeking something. Phyllis tells Dido she has no idea where her spouse is. Two men soon arrive claiming to be detectives, but they are searching for something as well. Dido believes these men will keep returning until they find what they want. She decides to not wait for a deadly incident to occur by doing her own brand of investigating.Marianne MacDonald provides more than just a fabulous mystery. Being a natural talent, Ms. MacDonald gives her audience a taste of London without confusing the non-British audience with the local vernacular or isolated back streets. The secondary characters in many ways steal the show, especially Dido's pontificating dad and her toddler Ben. The mystery reveals itself one tantalizing step at a time before attaining a dramatic climax that makes the story line feel real. Anyone new to this series will seek previous tales after delighting in ROAD KILL.Harriet Klausner
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