The woman who lowered the boom

David Handler, 1952-

Book - 2024

"Stewart "Hoagy" Hoag is walking on cloud nine after a meeting with his editor, Norma Fives, where she predicts his new book is sure to establish him as the next great American author. It has been years since he has even dreamed of such success after a crippling case of writer's block limited his literary aspirations to ghostwriting celebrity memoirs. But his happiness is short-lived when at his next meeting with Norma she asks for his help in discovering who is behind a series of increasingly threatening letters sent to her attention. Norma herself is not overly concerned about the letters but her boyfriend, Detective Lieutenant Romaine Very of the NYPD, thinks the threat of violence against Norma should not be so easil...y dismissed. Very feels the combination of Hoagy's detective skills and knowledge of the underbelly of the publishing world make him the perfect person to investigate the matter. Plus, Hoagy is a friend he can trust to take care of the love of his life. Hoagy agrees if for nothing else than to ease the minds of two people he cares about very much. After all, this is likely to be nothing more than a dramatic gesture from a frustrated writer. But as Hoagy and his trusty basset hound Lulu investigate, the threats move beyond the written word, making it clear that someone out there is determined to write a vicious ending to Norma's life. Could it be the wealthy aging children's author? The unethical snake of a literary agent? Or the handsy historian? This is not the return to the literary world that Hoagy dreamed of, but he is determined to unravel the mystery before the author of these crimes gets the last word"--

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Subjects
Genres
Detective and mystery fiction
Novels
Published
New York, NY : Mysterious Press 2024.
Language
English
Main Author
David Handler, 1952- (author)
Edition
First Mysterious Press edition
Physical Description
284 pages ; 22 cm
ISBN
9781613165133
Contents unavailable.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

Handler's witty 15th cozy featuring novelist-turned-sleuth Steward "Hoagy" Hoag (after The Girl Who Took What She Wanted) unfolds in the spring of 1995. Not long after receiving the news that his latest novel has been accepted for publication by Norma Fives, the brilliant young editor-in-chief of Guilford House, Hoagy gets a call from Norma enlisting his help. She's just received a death threat in the mail, and her boyfriend, Det. Lt. Romaine Very, the city's "top celebrity homicide detective" and an old friend of Hoagy's, wants the novelist to join him in the investigation. Who would want to kill Norma? One of the writers she's rejected? A top literary agent who lost his job and reputation when she outed him as a liar? A disgruntled former employee? The list is distressingly long, and after a series of interviews, Very and Hoagy--who's accompanied, as always, by his faithful basset hound Lulu--set out on the trail of a vicious, switchblade-wielding killer. Though the resolution is slightly below par for the series, Hoagy's narration is as sharp as ever. Fans will be glad to see that Hoagy and company haven't lost a step. Agent: Dominick Abel, Dominick Abel Literary. (Feb.)

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by Kirkus Book Review

Murder among the Big Apple's literati. The good news for successful debut novelist turned drug abuser turned ghostwriter Stewart Hoag--and it's very good news indeed--is that Norma Fives, the editor who'd offered him a contract for his long-delayed second novel, My Sweet Season of Madness, thinks it's the best American novel she's read in five years, a truly great piece of work. The bad news arrives via a phone call Hoagy gets the day after he and Norma meet: Star NYPD Homicide Det. Romaine Very, Norma's live-in lover, wants him to help identify the sender of an anonymous note threatening Norma with death. Asked to name people who might have a grudge against her, Norma sends Hoagy and Det. Very to Boyd Samuels, a literary agent whose scams she'd helped unmask, but their interview with him ends in a way that pretty much eliminates him as a suspect. So Norma comes up with three more candidates: plagiarizing presidential biographer Alexander McCord, whose latest tome was abruptly pulled from publication; agoraphobic suspense novelist Richard Groat, whom she'd cut loose when he couldn't deliver the goods; and Penelope Estes Poole, whose highly successful Weaverton Elves cozy mysteries seem to have reached their sell-by date. When Norma's assistant, Alissa Loeb, is stabbed to death on the Broadway local, presumably by someone who'd intended to kill Norma herself, things heat up, but it's not long before Hoagy's ready to confront a murderer who obligingly delivers such a remarkably detailed and extended confession that you'd swear another twist was coming. No such luck. The mystery is nothing special, but Hoagy is always good company. Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.