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Carlene O'Connor

Book - 2023

"In Dimpna Wilde's veterinary practice, an imminent meteor shower has elevated the usual gossip to include talk of shooting stars and the watch parties that are planned all over Dingle. But there are also matters nearer at hand to discuss--including the ragtag caravan of young people selling wares by the roadside, and the shocking death of Chris Henderson, an elderly local, in a hit-and-run. Just hours before his death, Henderson had stormed into the Garda Station, complaining loudly about the caravan's occupants causing noise and disruption. One of their members is a beautiful young woman named Brigid Sweeney, and Dimpna is shocked when Brigid later turns up at her practice, her clothing splattered in blood and an injured ha...re tucked into her shirt. Brigid claims that a mysterious stranger has been trying to obtain a lucky rabbit's foot. Dimpna is incensed at the thought of anyone mutilating animals, but there is far worse in store. On the night of the meteor shower, Dimpna finds Brigid's body tied to a tree, her left hand severed. She has bled to death. Wrapped around her wrist is a rabbit's foot. Brigid had amassed plenty of admirers, and there were tangled relationships within the group. But perhaps there is something more complex than jealousy at play. The rabbit's foot, the severed hand, the coinciding meteor shower--the deeper Dimpna and Detective Sargeant Cormac O'Brien investigate, the more ominous the signs seem to be, laced with a warning that Dimpna fears it will prove fatal to overlook" --

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MYSTERY/Oconnor Carlene
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Subjects
Genres
Detective and mystery fiction
Novels
Published
New York, NY : Kensington Publishing Corp 2023.
Language
English
Main Author
Carlene O'Connor (author)
Edition
First Kensington hardcover edition
Item Description
Sequel to: No strangers here.
Physical Description
330 pages ; 24 cm
ISBN
9781496737557
Contents unavailable.
Review by Library Journal Review

There are watch parties for the night's meteor showers all over Ireland's Dingle Peninsula, and veterinarian Dimpna Wilde has plans to meet with friends, including Detective Inspector Cormac O'Brien. A local man, Chris Henderson, has recently complained to the Garda about a group of four people, two dogs, and a parrot in a small caravan. Then Henderson turns up dead, the victim of a hit-and-run, while Dimpna frantically tries to save two foxes who were hit by the same car. Before Dimpna can even leave her clinic, one of the women from the caravan, Brigid Sweeney, shows up in a blood-covered jacket with a wild story about a knife, a man, and a rabbit. Dimpna thinks Brigid is lying, but the next morning she finds Brigid's body tied to a tree with her hand missing and a rabbit's foot in its place. A troubled O'Brien refuses to take the lead in either murder case, but he can't let go. Dimpna, with her love of animals, is dragged deeper into the case, as O'Brien struggles to find a brutal killer. VERDICT There's a surprising conclusion in this sequel to No Strangers Here. Sarah Stewart Taylor's fans will appreciate O'Connor's dark, atmospheric Irish mystery.--Lesa Holstine

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Review by Kirkus Book Review

A psychopathic killer terrorizes Ireland's Dingle Peninsula. Sgt. Barbara Neely is dealing with local Chris Henderson's complaints about a pervert he claims is watching one of the girls living in a caravan parked in the village that he's already complained about. Inspector Cormac O'Brien, who's nervously standing by, misses a chance to talk with Neely himself when he's called out to investigate disturbing quotations chalked on walls in the popular tourist town of Dingle, but Cormac's more concerned with his lapse of judgment in having sex with one of the women from the caravan and the fear that his crush, veterinarian Dimpna Wilde, will find out. When Henderson and two foxes are struck by a hit-and-run driver, Dimpna is called to help. Later that night a hysterical woman shows up at Dimpna's clinic with a slightly injured hare wrapped in a blood-soaked jacket, a bloody butcher's knife, and a wild story about someone trying to cut the animal's foot off. She is Brigid Sweeney, another of the caravan residents, which also include two mastiffs who keep breaking their chains and chasing cars. After she leaves, Cormac calls to report that someone found the caravan dogs stumbling down the road as though drunk; they are brought to the clinic for the night. Returning them the next morning, Dimpna finds Brigid's body. She's been drugged and tied to a tree; her left hand has been cut off and festooned with a rabbit's foot. Although Cormac, whose mother has just died, shouldn't be working the case after his encounter with Brigid's caravan mate, his expertise is needed to solve a crime so heinous and baffling that it has the whole area on edge. An excellent police procedural whose complex characters act out a twisty tale of hate. Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.