Product Details
Liar: An Irene Kelly Mystery

Liar: An Irene Kelly Mystery
By Jan Burke

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Product Description

Investigative reporting has its hazards, but trouble hits home for Irene Kelly when her estranged aunt is murdered--and Irene becomes the leading suspect. With the police hot on her trail, Irene sets out to find cousin Travis, her dead aunt's son, convinced he's the next target.

But when Irene finds Travis, a camper-driving children's storyteller with suspiciously deep pockets, things blow up--literally. It takes several brushes with death, staying one step ahead of the law, and a few not-so-sweet reunions for Irene to untangle a complex web of family secrets and long-held grudges, and discover just who is killing off the Kelly clan--and why.


Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #313904 in Books
  • Published on: 1999-05-01
  • Released on: 1999-04-07
  • Original language: English
  • Number of items: 1
  • Binding: Mass Market Paperback
  • 400 pages

Features


Editorial Reviews

Amazon.com Review
As reporter Irene Kelly investigates her Aunt Briana's death, she learns all about the longstanding feuds between several branches of her extended family and becomes the number one suspect in a murder case. Kelly's part of the family split with her Aunt Briana and her husband decades ago for reasons that Kelly has never really understood, but which involve bigamy, murder,illiteracy, and of course, money. Kelly's first task is to locate her cousin Travis, who she hasn't seen since childhood, and inform him of his mother's untimely death. Next, Kelly has to protect him from whoever murdered his mother. While investigating the case, Kelly encounters a violent man in a wet suit, a slightly unhinged inventor, a storyteller named Cosmo, and some unsavory residents of a trailer park - and learns that she is distantly related to most of these odd characters.

This is Jan Burke's sixth book about the adventures of Irene Kelly, a sassy journalist who lives in sunny southern California with her husband (a police detective), drives a Karmann Ghia, and seems to be a magnet for trouble. In this case, the trouble is that everyone is lying, even people with good intentions. Kelly's cousin is a capable and seasoned liar, a skill that comes in handy in several sticky situations. When deceit isn't enough, Kelly's best friend Rachel leaps to their aid with flying fists and tough talk. Fans of mysteries by Sue Grafton and Sara Paretsky are likely to enjoy Jan Burke's writing. Irene Kelly is a likeable, approachable heroine - an ordinary middle-aged woman who manages to get the best of the bad guys by relying on her wits and her friends. -Jill Marquis

From Kirkus Reviews
Who's buried in the grave Irene Kelly's sister Barbara had already picked out for herself in the family plot? Realizing that it's her long-unseen aunt, Briana Maguire, a file clerk who became a hit-and-run victim two weeks ago, leads Irene into only deeper mysteries. Why did Briana disinherit her rolling-stone son Travis in favor of Irene, who hadn't seen her for 25 years? What exactly did the family quarrel that kept Irene and Briana apart have to do with Briana's bigamous husband, Arthur Sperry (ne' Spanning), or the murder 20 years ago of Arthur's first wife, sugar-beet heiress Gwendolyn DeMont? Why is the DeMont murder, so long dormant, now threatening Irene's life via fires and bombs? Who is Harold Richmond, the unscrupulous private eye who's been stalking Irene, working for? And how can the rifts--chasms, really--in the DeMont and Spanning and Maguire families be mended after all the suspicion and distrust over adultery and bigamy and murder have festered for all these years? The questions are reminiscent of Ross Macdonald at his thorniest. But Burke, whose return to straight detection after the imperiled-hostage scenario of Hocus (1997) produces the biggest and most complex of her six novels, has Macdonald's sense of family doom without his control of subplots and clues or his economy in managing revelations. The result is a warmly detailed extended-family portrait that conveys a constant sense of menace without providing a compelling payoff or, in retrospect, a strong central premise. -- Copyright ©1998, Kirkus Associates, LP. All rights reserved.

Review
"A gifted storyteller who can hold her own with any writer in

the genre...including Cornwell [and] Crichton."

-- -- Amazon.com

"A winner...The best book in this wonderful...series."

-- -- Midwest Book Review

"Ms. Burke keeps things moving, spinning an intricate

yarn...riveting and wholly enjoyable."

-- -- Chicago Tribune

"The best Kelly adventure to date."

-- -- St. Petersburg Times

"A deliciously convoluted story that kept me turning the pages." -- Mystery News

"A gifted storyteller who can hold her own with any writer in the genre...including Cornwell [and] Crichton." -- Amazon.com

"A thriller of a ride...So riveting, I couldn't put it down. Jan Burke only gets better. The pace is fast and never slows down, each layer of the mystery is revealed artfully and...the believability factor is high. Irene and the gang held me in their grasp." -- The Snooper

"A winner...The best book in this wonderful...series." -- Midwest Book Review

"Ms. Burke keeps things moving, spinning an intricate yarn...riveting and wholly enjoyable." -- Chicago Tribune

"The best Kelly adventure to date." -- St. Petersburg Times


Customer Reviews

Never gotten as sick of following an absurd family history2
Jan Burke is a good writer. But here, she has con- structed a so called thriller with a plot that is tied to following a preposterous family tree that can only be called absurd. Imagine if you will, a 16 year old illiterate gardener marrying a 45 year old millionairess and himself becoming a self made millionaire because of his innate brilliance. Then, despite becoming a bigamist , he is depicted as one of the most beloved human beings who have ever lived, based on the recollection of all his friends, relatives and associates. On top of this plotting, there is a subplot involving the strange sign language of "hobos" that is off putting and could'nt be more out of place in a novel of this sort. Strange stuff! In addition to all this, there are numerous allusions to a hostage incident involving the heroine's husband that obviously occured in an earlier book that is not explained at all--unless I missed it trying to keep track of the family tree. I have read many books that involve a series where incidents occuring in earlier books are referred to--usually in a way that explains behavior in the current book--but they are always explained. This seems necessary, whether you have read the earlier book or not. I will read Burke again, hopefully because I am sure she has exhausted the exploration of her boring family history. She can do better

Once again Burke delivers a wonderful book.5
If you love Jan Burke's mysteries-and anyone who loves mysteries will love Jan Burke-then you will love Liar. It is her best book yet.

Burke is such a good writer that her characters truly come to life in her books. I feel like I know Irene Kelly, the reporter/sleuth of the series. I am always anxious for the next Irene Kelly book to come out and read about her latest exploits. The wait for this book was well worth it. Liar does not disappoint.

Irene investigates the death of her aunt and meets new and strange relatives as she becomes the prime suspect of what the police now believe is a murder. Burke skillfullly weaves the reader through the cast of well written new and familiar characters. This is a crefully crafted book, with a complicated plot, but it is thoroughly readable and enjoyable. Burke uses great skill to make an intricate plot so easy to follow.

Reading this book is like spending time with good friends. You will love it.

Outstanding, brilliant and a total joy to read5
Over two decades ago, Irene's family discovered that her aunt was married to a man who also was married, at the same time, to a wealthy, much older heiress. When the rich woman was found murdered, the bigamist was the only suspect. However, testimony from Irene's aunt and their teenage son gave him an air tight alibi. Since that scandal, the Kelly family has had no contact with the Macguires until it was discovered that Irene's aunt was murdered. Irene is assigned the task of finding her deceased aunt's son Trevor and breaking the news to him.

When she finally locates the man and overcomes his resentment towards her and her family for deserting him, she tells him about his mother. A devastated Trevor is unaware that his father is also dead and he is now a wealthy person. Attempts have been made on his life and Irene, who is fond of her cousin, is determined to stop the culprit before Trevor becomes the next victim.

Of all the on-going mystery series on the market today, the Irene Kelly novels are one of favorite of this reviewer. The best book in this wonderful collection is the latest, LIAR which turns me into a fibber because I said that about the previous book, HOCUS. The story line is an action-packed mystery, filled with interesting characters whose traits are explored. The trademark Jan Burke prose makes this a winner that deserves to be the breakout book for the talented author.

Harriet Klausner