The dead key

D. M. Pulley

Book - 2015

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MYSTERY/Pulley, D. M.
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Subjects
Genres
Mystery fiction
Published
Seattle : Thomas & Mercer [2015]
Language
English
Main Author
D. M. Pulley (author)
Physical Description
470 pages ; 21 cm
ISBN
9781477820872
Contents unavailable.
Review by Booklist Review

The author of this fascinating, frustrating novel brings a fresh imagining of this world of larceny and murder. The hero is not a cop or a PI. Iris Latch is a structural engineer, of all things. Her company is surveying an abandoned bank building in downtown Cleveland. As she wanders the glorious old shell, she notices odd things. Office suites are not just abandoned, but ransacked. Why are locked safe-deposit boxes strewn about? Time jump and we're in 1978, the year of the bank's closing. There's a new heroine, Beatrice Baker, who has just hired on as a banker's secretary. The decades go back and forth as Iris discovers the humongous crimes Beatrice's bosses were committing. The effect is magical. The women are at both ends of the mystery, never meeting but dealing with the same worried cop and security guard, even the same bartender. Would that the author had focused on this and less on the chaos of the women's lives because the complications slow the pace. A good read, even so, but some patience is required.--Crinklaw, Don Copyright 2015 Booklist

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Kirkus Book Review

Pulley's debut is a story of theft, seduction and greed in a stately bank building.In 1998, 20 years after the doors of the First Bank of Cleveland were mysteriously chained shut, 23-year-old civil engineer Iris Latch is put on an assignment of a "sensitive nature." Happy to be out of her cubicle, she has to spend her days in the abandoned building doing a "renovation feasibility study" for an anonymous buyer. With free reign to explore, Iris discovers offices that were left preserved almost exactly as they were on the day the bank closed. When she finds that several safe-deposit boxes still have items of value inside them and stumbles on key No. 547 in a desk drawer, Iris is determined to return the key to its rightful owner, leading her down a rabbit hole of scandal, theft and murder. Interwoven with Iris' investigation is the story of Beatrice Baker, a 16-year-old secretary who worked in the bank in 1978 and stumbled on the same mystery of key No. 547 as it was unfolding. Reading clues written in shorthand by a friend who has disappeared, Beatrice discovered that the contents of more than 100 safe-deposit boxes were officially missing. The two storylines converge nicely, leading both characters into the same intricate web of secrets and betrayals. The author imbues the bank with great physical presence, its architecture, floor plans and structure all meticulously described, creating a setting that feels alive and haunted, but the convoluted plot, great length and uneven pacing become a bit cumbersome. While the two heroines are engaging, the mystery might not move quickly enough for many readers. For readers who do make it to the end, there is genuine suspense with satisfying surprises. Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.