The body in the casket A Faith Fairchild mystery

Katherine Hall Page

Book - 2017

Caterer Faith Fairchild has come to know the Massachusetts village of Aleford region well, but isn't familiar with Havencrest, a privileged enclave. Then the owner of Rowan House, a secluded sprawling Arts and Crafts mansion, calls her about catering a weekend house party. Producer/director of a string of hit musicals, Max Dane is celebrating his seventieth birthday. As they discuss the event, Faith's client makes a confession: he hired Faith for her sleuthing ability. He believes one of the guests wants to kill him. he only clue is a gift received the week before: an empty casket containing a 20-year-old Playbill from Max's only failed, production, Heaven or Hell.--

Saved in:

1st Floor Show me where

MYSTERY/Page, Katherine
1 / 1 copies available
Location Call Number   Status
1st Floor MYSTERY/Page, Katherine Checked In
Subjects
Genres
Detective and mystery fiction
Mystery fiction
Published
New York, NY : William Morrow an imprint of HarperCollinsPublishers [2017]
Language
English
Main Author
Katherine Hall Page (author)
Edition
First edition
Physical Description
238 pages ; 24 cm
ISBN
9780062439574
9780062439567
Contents unavailable.
Review by New York Times Review

james lee burke is what fellow writers call a wordsmith. He can make your eyes water with a lyrical description of tropical rain falling on a Louisiana bayou: "I love the mist hanging in the trees," he tells us in robicheaux (Simon & Schuster, $27.99), "a hint of wraiths that would not let heavy stones weigh them down in their graves, the raindrops clicking on the lily pads, the fish rising as though in celebration." But in the next breath, he'll offer a comprehensive account of an excruciating death by torture: "The guy who did him took his time." And to satisfy our appetite for Southern eccentricity, he'll introduce us to great characters like Baby Cakes Babineau and Pookie the Possum Domingue. Dave Robicheaux, the narrator of this robust regional series, is an Iberia Parish sheriff's detective with the melancholy air of a man who occasionally sees the holloweyed ghosts of the Confederate dead. Haunted by his own violent past, Robicheaux keeps trying to redeem himself through good works; but when he falls off the wagon, as he does here in a spectacular way, he thinks he might be capable of committing murder. But he's not in the same class as a contract killer named Chester Wimple ("Sometimes people call me Smiley"). Like most of Burke's plots, this one has roots in Louisiana history, a gumbo of "misogamy and racism and homophobia," not to mention "demagoguery" and "self-congratulatory ignorance." Mob figures like Fat Tony Nemo look tough, but they have nothing on up-and-coming politicians like Jimmy Nightingale, eager to follow in the footsteps of his flamboyantly crooked predecessors. Burke has no inclination to romanticize gangsters, no matter how well groomed: "They were brutal, stupid to the core, and had the visceral instincts of medieval peasants armed with pitchforks." Rather, he pays homage to the fallen dead like Lt. Robert S. Broussard, a Civil War hero whose sword gets into the hands of a crime boss, fn rescuing this artifact, Robicheaux bares his bleeding heart for "La Louisiane, the love of my life, the home of Jolié Blon and Evangeline and the Great Whore of Babylon, the place for which 1 would die." WITTY, STYLISH and a bit of a rogue - that's what people said about Richard Nash, known as Beau, the notorious dandy who transformed the English city of Bath into "the 18th-century equivalent of Vegas." The same might be said of Peter Lovesey, whose elegant mysteries pay tribute to the past glories of this beautiful city, fn BEAU DEATH (Soho Crime, $27.95), a demolition crew unearths the remains of a bewigged gentleman in period dress, setting off gossip that Nash has been found - murdered. Detective Superintendent Peter Diamond accepts this theory until he discovers the desiccated corpse was wearing modern-day underwear. There's always a whiff of Restoration comedy about Lovesey's cunning plots, which make a point of featuring shrewd women like the drolly named Georgina Dallymore, whose ample comedic gifts make her a figure fit for a Congreve comedy and the perfect companion for Diamond. if you find it significant that tortellini can be easier to eat than linguine or fettuccine, THE BODY IN THE CASKET (Morrow, $25.99) IS your kind of mystery. Katherine Hall Page, who has written almost two dozen culinary mysteries, has come up with another smart twist on her cozy formula featuring Faith Fairchild, a minister's wife and keen-eyed amateur detective from suburban Massachusetts. Faith's catering firm, Have Faith in Your Kitchen, has been hired for a weekend party by Max Dane, a once-famous Broadway producer celebrating his 70th birthday. But what he really wants to hire is Faith's sleuthing talent, because he strongly suspects that one of his guests wants to kill him. The mechanics of the murder mystery are well set up and executed, but what you're hungry for is what's on the menu. This time, Faith is starting off with "Fallen Angel" cocktails, then moving along to deviled eggs and an apple-potato dish called "Himmel und Erde." The main course, lobster pasta fra diavolo, is followed by an angel food cake, from a recipe that calls for "nine large eggs" and a mountain of sugar. Sounds divine. where better to set a gangster novel than big, bad, brawling Chicago during Prohibition? The way Ray Celestin tells it in DEAD MAN'S BLUES (Pegasus Crime, $25.95), everyone in the city was corrupt, from the mayor, Big Bill Thompson, to the 25,000 soda shop owners who ran speakeasies in their back rooms. The most colorful characters were mobsters like A1 Capone and his rival, Bugs Moran, so-called because he was certifiably "buggy, crazy, homicidally violent and not very clever." As he did in his first novel, "The Axeman," which was set in New Orleans, Celestin perfectly captures the jazzy street rhythms of this proudly pugnacious city and its peculiar characters. His authorial gaze encompasses everything from a flower-festooned gangster's funeral (with "a casket costing more than most people's houses") to a golf game featuring Capone; his hit man, Machine Gun Jack McGurn; and the mayor of suburban Burnham. Which is a lot funnier than the funeral. Marilyn STASIO has covered crime fiction for the Book Review since 1988. Her column appears twice a month.

Copyright (c) The New York Times Company [August 30, 2019]
Review by Booklist Review

Max Dane, a once-famous Broadway musical producer, hires Faith Fairchild to cater his birthday party and to use her sleuthing skills to discover which of his invited guests wants to kill him. The guests, who all had roles in Dane's musical Heaven or Hell, left the theater world after the show flopped, and most faded into obscurity; but Dane believes one of them wants revenge. While creating delicious meals, Faith investigates the guests, endangering herself while unmasking a killer. Meanwhile, Faith's best friend's daughter, Samantha, along with her friend Zach, is involved in her own investigation, looking into the background of her beloved grandmother's new beau. The running of a catering business in small-town Aleford, Massachusetts, the ongoing frame story in this series, is well complemented here with glimpses of the theater world. The always-engaging Fairchild and the supporting cast of spirited recurring characters will appeal to fans of Diane Mott Davidson's Goldy Schulz series and Carolyn Hart's Annie Darling novels.--O'Brien, Sue Copyright 2017 Booklist

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

Agatha-winner Page's 24th Faith Fairchild mystery (after 2016's Body in the Wardrobe) is a cracking good traditional manor house mystery. Faith isn't enthusiastic about leaving her family for three days to cater the birthday celebration of legendary Broadway impresario Maxwell Dane-at least not until Max offers to pay her more than she has ever earned for a single event. But Max wants Faith for her sleuthing ability as much as for her catering skills. Someone recently had a coffin delivered to Rowan House, Max's mansion in Havencrest, Mass., and he suspects the grim warning came from one of the people who had roles in his last and most ignominious Broadway production, a spectacular flop entitled Heaven or Hell. Who wants Max dead? Is it the director Max fired, the embittered set designer, the slighted actress who should have had the lead, or one of the other artists whose careers were never the same again? Realistic characters and a pair of intriguing side stories contribute to a satisfying read. Agent: Faith Hamlin, Sanford J. Greenburger Associates. (Dec.) © Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by Library Journal Review

Hired to cater the weekend birthday party of a retired Broadway producer, Faith -Fairchild soon learns Max Dane chose her for her sleuthing skills. After receiving a casket as a gift, he's convinced that one of his guests plans to kill him. Page's latest, following The Body in the Wardrobe, is set in an isolated country house and will tempt fans of Broadway musicals as well as Agatha Christie's readers.-LH © Copyright 2017. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

(c) Copyright Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.