The man in the microwave oven

Susan Cox

Book - 2020

"Following Susan Cox's Minotaur Books/Mystery Writers of America First Crime Novel award-winning debut, The Man in the Microwave Oven is her next delightfully quirky mystery featuring San Francisco transplant Theo Bogart. Fleeing from a murder and family tragedy in her native England, where she was the scandal du jour for the tabloid press, Theo Bogart changed her name and built an undercover life in a close-knit San Francisco neighborhood. She didn't expect to find love and friendship there, and now she doesn't know how-or if-to reveal the truth. After a confrontation with a difficult neighbor, Theo fears her secrets are about to be uncovered after all. When the woman who threatened to expose her is murdered, Theo is em...broiled in the kind of jeopardy she crossed an ocean to escape. Worse yet, dangerous family secrets have followed her. Theo's grandfather unveils a glimpse of the shadowy world he once inhabited as an agent for the British Secret Service, bringing an even bigger breed of trouble-and another death-to Theo's doorstep. She finds herself fighting to protect herself, her family, and her new friends, aware that one of them might be a murderer. Susan Cox has once again painted a delightfully quirky portrait of a colorful San Francisco neighborhood and a woman finding her way through exactly the kind of scandalous mystery she was trying to leave behind"--

Saved in:

1st Floor Show me where

MYSTERY/Cox Susan
1 / 1 copies available
Location Call Number   Status
1st Floor MYSTERY/Cox Susan Checked In
Subjects
Genres
Mystery fiction
Detective and mystery fiction
Published
New York : Minotaur Books 2020.
Language
English
Main Author
Susan Cox (author)
Edition
First edition
Physical Description
pages cm
ISBN
9781250116208
Contents unavailable.
Review by Booklist Review

Theo Bogart is happily settled into her new life in San Francisco following the horrific family scandal that forced her to flee England and change her identity. Her worst nightmare of exposure seems about to come true until the vengeful neighbor threatening her is murdered. Theo's somewhat guilty relief is short-lived, though, as the bodies begin to pile up, and her beloved grandfather is implicated. Soon, she's breaking into buildings and working with a group of former Cold War spies to get to the truth, even if it means risking all she's built for herself. A solid enough read, although some of the supporting characters are a bit stereotypically quirky, and the transition to spy thriller halfway through doesn't always work. Another flaw is the fact that, in this second series outing, the premise of living under false pretenses is already wearing rather thin. Still, Theo is an engaging main character, and readers may wish to stick with her a little longer.

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

In Cox's madcap second mystery featuring British expat Theophania Bogart (after 2015's The Man on the Washing Machine), cutthroat attorney Katrina Dermody hints that she's aware Theo is living in San Francisco under an assumed name. Theo fears Katrina will divulge her secrets in retaliation for opposing Katrina's client's construction of a high-rise condo in their Fabian Gardens neighborhood. Before Theo can determine what Katrina knows about her scandalous past, however, someone murders the attorney. To further complicate matters, aging priest Sergei Wolf visits Theo's store, Aromas, with an urgent message for her grandfather, Clement Pryce-Fitton. Theo relays the information to Clement, who reveals that he's former British intelligence and advises Theo to be on alert, as Sergei's communiqué was a coded distress signal. Cox cleverly entwines the two seemingly unrelated story lines, upping the tale's stakes and body count. Endearingly eccentric characters and a vividly sketched setting help distract from the contrived setup and dubious denouement. Fans of Donna Andrews will appreciate Cox's zany style. Agent: Susanna Einstein, Einstein Literary Management. (Nov.)

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

Fleeing a family scandal in London, Theo Bogart moved to San Francisco, changed her name, bought a building, opened a bath-and-body shop, and found friends and love. Now she feels guilty about lying to her friends and lover. Somehow, Katrina Dermody, a lawyer who stirs up trouble locally, discovers Theo's identity and threatens her. When Theo finds Katrina's dead body, she's actually relieved, and breaks into Katrina's office to steal her files. She's not the only one who breaks in, though someone chases Theo, shooting at her. Inspector Lichlyter is a little suspicious, but she already knows Theo's identity because she was lead investigator the last time Theo was involved in a murder. Things get worse when a Ukrainian priest shows up looking for Theo's grandfather, who followed her to the States, and Theo's grandfather reveals he knows the man because they were both spies. When the priest ends up dead, and her grandfather is arrested, Theo develops a few investigative skills of her own. VERDICT The follow-up to Cox's award-winning The Man on the Washing Machine includes a delightful amateur sleuth and eccentric characters with appeal for fans of traditional mysteries. The intricate plotting will keep readers guessing.--Lesa Holstine, Evansville Vanderburgh P.L., IN

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

Theophania Bogart, a fugitive from British high society, finds that her second case takes her outside her circle of friends but not out of her embattled San Francisco neighborhood. Who could possibly have wanted to shoot attorney Katrina Dermody to death as she sat in the Tesla she'd made sure everyone in Fabian Gardens knew about? Theo, who discovers her body, knows she can start with the fellow tenants who opposed predatory developer Amos Noble's determined attempt to plant a condo in the neighborhood. Her suspicions intensify when she insinuates herself into Katrina's office and emerges with a folder documenting the juicy secrets of every tenant from Sabina Talbot, the daughter of anti-condo demonstrators Guillermo and Ruth D'Allessio (child out of wedlock), to wine company owners Jesus and Luis Aguardo (sale of liquor to teen who drank himself to death) to Angela Lacerda (high school abortion) to Theo herself, a photographer who changed her name and fled the press when her father, a noted English portraitist, stabbed her mother to death. As if that weren't a rich enough field, a visit from priest/spymaster Sergei Wolf alerts Theo to the existence of a venerable espionage organization spanning generations whose members include both her beloved grandfather Clement Pryce-Fitton and Katrina. Where will the complications end? Not even at the Acknowledgments, whose first line identifies a real-life mystery a good deal more lighthearted than the higher-stakes case Theo's plunged into. Colorful, bustling, and stuffed to the brim with endless complications and a throwaway killer. Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.