There were thirteen crime-scene pictures. Dead faces set in grimaces and shouts. Faces howling, whistling, moaning, crying, hissing. Hazel pinned them to the wall and stood back. It was a silent opera of ghosts. Detective Inspector Hazel Micallef has lived all her days in the small town of Port Dundas and is now making her way toward retirement with something less than grace. Hobbled by a bad back and a dependence on painkillers, and feeling blindsided by divorce after nearly four decades of marriage, sixty-one-year-old Hazel has only the constructive criticism of her old goat of a mother and her own sharp tongue to buoy her. But when a terminally ill Port Dundas woman is gruesomely murdered in her own home, Hazel and her understaffed department must spring to life. And as one terminally ill victim after another is found--their bodies drained of blood, their mouths sculpted into strange shapes--Hazel finds herself tracking a truly terrifying serial killer across the country while everything she was barely holding together begins to spin out of control. Through the cacophony of her bickering staff, her unsupportive superiors, a clamoring press, the town's rumor mill, and her own nagging doubts, Hazel can sense the dead trying to call out. But what secret do they have to share? And will she hear it before it's too late? In The Calling, I nger Ash Wolfe brings a compelling new voice and an irresistible new heroine to the mystery world.
Characters are likeable, but I didn't like the premise of the book. Just a bit too weird for me.
Really Creepy
Published by Lori A. Meyers , 3 years ago
This book is really creepy! Why are all these people willing to die? Is the person responsible for the deaths a miracle worker of some sort or an angel of death? Or is this person absolutely one of the sickest serial killers out there. This book is not for the squeamish. The main characters are well developed and very believable. Would make a great movie. Lori A. Meyers
At last, a novel in my comfort zone...
Published by Thriftbooks.com User , 16 years ago
This is a fine novel in the rather British manner - after all, the author (whoever he/she is) is Canadian and it takes place IN Canada. Having been disapointed in three of Elizabeth George's veddy British mysteries (she's from Warren, Ohio and can fool every Brit I've recommended her TO), I'm happy with this delicious murder and its cast of characters - even the dead ones. My only caveat is my disapointment in not being able to find books of equal enjoyment by the same author who writes under his/her own name. Ah, well, eventually he - or she - will come out of hiding. I suspect this is a writer I haven't yet read - and heaven knows that at my age I've read hundreds. I very much appreciate finding books that have no vampires... just for instance. I've taken to re-reading Taylor Caldwell and Morris West and John O'Hara... and more recently, James Carroll (at least, he's alive).
Good book
Published by Thriftbooks.com User , 16 years ago
It got me from the first chapter. I was really impressed with her skills as a writer. It was not perfect, it lost a little steam in the middle and it got intense toward the end. The main character was interesting and the murderer.The minor characters were good too. overall , i enjoyed the book and I hope to read her next one, given she uses the same name and not her real name.
Gillian Flynn is right!
Published by Thriftbooks.com User , 16 years ago
Gillian Flynn's squib on the back of this book says it's an "unplug-the-phone, skip-all-meals, ignore-your-bedtime thriller" -- and she is absolutely right! Last Sunday, I ignored my household chores, stayed inside all day and didn't go to bed until finishing this book. I wish I knew who the real author is, though, because I would read their entire oeuvre!
The Wolfe At The Door
Published by Thriftbooks.com User , 16 years ago
I finished this book this afternoon and said to someone on Readerville that I haven't been this creeped out by a book since I read a mystery called The Lodger when I was a young teen. The main character in The Calling, Hazel Micallef, is a 61-year old Detective Inspector in a small town in Canada. She lives with her mother, has two grown daughters and an ex-husband and fights her back pain and her loneliness, but doesn't, until this book opens, have much occasion to fight serious crime. Until one of her town's citizens is murdered...and Micallef and her small team realize that the killer has killed 15 times before...and that he isn't done yet. The killer is a big ole bag of creepy...and Hazel and her crew are all appealing and interesting. There's a big hoo-haa about this book because Inger Ash Wolfe is a pseudonym...there's lots of speculation as to who she really is. (The main money seems to be on it being Michael Redhill.) I have to say, I don't care who he or she is...I just want more books from this pen. It's a really great read.
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