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Carregando... Nerds Who Kill (2006)de Mark Richard Zubro
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Registre-se no LibraryThing tpara descobrir se gostará deste livro. Ainda não há conversas na Discussão sobre este livro. At a major science fiction and fantasy convention in Chicago, a major elderly author is found dead in her hotel bedroom dressed as Xena. The murder weapon was a broadsword which detective Paul Turner's elder son was wearing as part of his costume. Entertaining procedural, although slightly confusing in that Paul's sons seem to be a year younger than in the previous book. sem resenhas | adicionar uma resenha
Pertence à série
Paul Turner is a widowed father of two teenaged boys, one of whom has spina bifida, rapidly approaching middle age, and used to dealing gracefully with all the challenges these things entail. Turner, however, is slightly different from others in his situation - he's openly gay and a homicide detective for the Chicago Police Department. Despite everything, his personal and family life is relatively placid. Until right now. This time, his life couldn't possibly get more complex and problematic: there's a Science Fiction and Media convention in Chicago this weekend - one of the world's largest such gathering - and his sons are both attending. In full costume. And Paul Turner, like any good father, is going with them. If the prospect of that weren't bad enough, one of the convention's guests - one of the field's most successful fantasy writers - is found murdered, mostly likely by the broadsword found rammed through the corpse's chest. In most circumstances, a broadsword would be a unique murder weapon, but this time there are hundreds of attendees carrying similar ones as part of their costumes. Including his own son. That one gruesome murder is just the beginning - the dead bodies amidst the revelers are starting to pile up - and Turner must sort through a confusing array of suspects in short order if he's to find the killer in time. Não foram encontradas descrições de bibliotecas. |
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Google Books — Carregando... GênerosClassificação decimal de Dewey (CDD)813.54Literature English (North America) American fiction 20th Century 1945-1999Classificação da Biblioteca do Congresso dos E.U.A. (LCC)AvaliaçãoMédia:
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Complaints first and foremost: Why do mystery authors feel they have to dump on SF/F cons? Don't they have mystery cons they can dump on? They never have anything nice to say about the people who attend cons and when they do, it's almost always a back-handed complement. Yes, I'm pointing at the author of [bc:Bimbos of the Death Sun|471512|Bimbos of the Death Sun (Jay Omega, #1)|Sharyn McCrumb|http://photo.goodreads.com/books/1320448175s/471512.jpg|459808] too.
And, the only thing on the cover that has anything to do with the plot is the sword by the way.
So, the bulk of this story takes place over the course of a Saturday at a SF/F convention with a large attendee list, including authors, movie makers, wannabees, not-quite-there-yets, and any number of people in between as well as the malcontents who have (possibly legitimate) complaints against a certain author who ends up dead shortly after the con starts. Unfortunately, the method of complaint causes our police detectives, Paul Turner and Buck Fenwick, no end of headaches and, for Paul, anxiety - since his kids are drawn in to the investigation, if only peripherally.
The set up isn't bad for the story and the culprit(s), but the story itself plods as we, and our two detectives, are jerked from one crime scene to another and getting more confused in the process. A competent, if not the best, story by Zubro. Sigh. ( )