Product Details
Oh Danny Boy (Molly Murphy Mysteries)

Oh Danny Boy (Molly Murphy Mysteries)
By Rhys Bowen

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Product Description

Irish immigrant Molly Murphy is contemplating giving up PI work for something a little less…exciting. Molly has had quite enough excitement recently, thank you very much. Especially from the handsome but deceptive NYPD captain Daniel Sullivan. She wants him out of her life for good. But when Daniel is accused of accepting bribes and lands himself in the Tombs, the notorious city jail, he begs Molly to help prove he was framed. After everything they’ve been through together, how can she turn him down? As Molly finds herself drawn further into Daniel’s case, Molly begins to fear that his trouble is related to one of his investigations: catching a serial killer who is targeting prostitutes, known to the locals as the East Side Ripper….


Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #93645 in Books
  • Published on: 2007-03-06
  • Released on: 2007-03-06
  • Original language: English
  • Number of items: 1
  • Binding: Mass Market Paperback
  • 352 pages

Features


Editorial Reviews

From Publishers Weekly
In Agatha-winner Bowen's entertaining if imperfect fifth Molly Murphy mystery (after 2005's In Like Flynn), the feisty Irish lass, who has immigrated to New York City and become a PI, comes to the rescue of someone very near and dear to her, NYPD cop Daniel Sullivan. Daniel's been accused of taking a bribe, but Molly is sure he's innocent. Before his arrest, Daniel was trying to track down the East Side Ripper, a prostitute-murdering brute. Molly suspects someone wanted Daniel off the case and set him up. While trying to prove Daniel's innocence, Molly realizes that their one night of passion has left her pregnant. She contemplates an abortion, but can't go through with it. If the solution to Molly's predicament is a predictable cop-out, Bowen deserves kudos for her recreation of early 20th-century New York. She avoids the temptation to give cameos to every famous figure of the day, but those she does work in—like New York's first "lady policeman"—are wonderfully chosen. (Mar.)
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

From Booklist
New York City in the summer of 1902: Molly Murphy is seriously considering giving up her dream of being a private investigator to move west, away from the alluring-but-deceptive police captain, Daniel Sullivan. But when Daniel suddenly winds up in jail, the target of a bribery probe, Molly has no choice but to help him clear his name--a challenge that becomes far more complicated when Molly has to track down a serial killer as well. This is the fifth Murphy mystery, and it's a beautifully constructed historical one that catapults readers back in time and immerses them in turn-of-the-twentieth-century New York. David Pitt
Copyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved

Review

“Molly is a smart, feisty, independent heroine…[an] appealing series.”
Booklist
 
“Bowen deserves kudos for her recreation of early 20th-century New York”
Publishers Weekly
 
“Enjoyable charm and wit.”—Baltimore Sun
 
“Another outstanding mystery.”—Library Journal
 
“Excellent.”—Toronto Globe and Mail
 
“Entertains readers and teaches them about the immigrant experience…charming.”—Tampa Tribune
 
“Murder, mayhem, disease, and death…reliable period thrills for Molly’s fans.”—Kirkus Reviews
 
“Bowen has created one of the most ferociously spunky heroines to grace the pages of a historical mystery series.”—Harriet Klausner’s Book Reviews
 
“Beautifully constructed.”—Booklist
 
“This is the fourth in a series of this particular character, and a really good one at that….I will definitely read more by this author.”—Affaire de Coeur (four stars)
 
“There’s a reason why Bowen gets nominated for so many awards. She’s just damn good….Books like [Oh Danny Boy] are the reason I love mysteries.”—CrimeSpreeMag.com


Customer Reviews

Outstanding Fifth Entry5
Molly Murphy is frustrated with her life in New York City. Being a detective isn't going well and she is having a hard time paying the bills. Plus, after her last encounter with police captain Daniel Sullivan, she wants nothing more to do with him. She's seriously considering moving out west and becoming a schoolteacher, much to her friends' dismay.

Then she finds out rather dramatically that Daniel has been arrested and is being held in the notorious Tombs prison. He's been accused of accepting a bribe, and the new police commissioner just happened to be on the scene to witness it. Of course, the charge is laughable. Daniel is one of the few people on the police force who would never accept a bribe. With most of the force turned against him, his only hope of proving his innocence is Molly. She reluctantly takes the case.

After several false starts, Molly begins to suspect that it might be related to one of two cases he was working at the time. The first involves a doped horse at the racetrack on Coney Island. The second is far more dangerous and involves a serial killer murdering prostitutes in the East Side. Either case is sure to put Molly in grave danger. Will she find the proof she needs? Will she live to free Daniel?

As if this weren't enough, Molly is having some health problems. And Daniel's ex-fiancee shows up requesting a favor from Molly. What's Arabella up to?

My biggest frustration with these books has been the fact that Molly sometimes seems to stumble on the answer with little more then luck. I couldn't help but laugh as Molly herself discusses this fact several times over the course of the book.

This is easily the best entry in the series. Several storylines weave together to form a logical conclusion. I only pieced everything together a couple pages before Molly did, and she did an excellent job of piecing things together herself. Even friends Sid and Gus get into the act. As always these neighbors provide some wonderful comic and tender moments. They continue to show their love for Molly, and it easily endears them to the reader.

The other characters in the novel are well drawn as well. New characters like Gentlemen Jack and Sabella Goodwin not only provide the needed story points, but also help recreate Molly's world. The scenes with the Arabella are especially good; I wouldn't mind seeing her character again.

The city itself plays a large roll in the story. Rhys Bowen brings the New York City of 1902 to vivid life. The sights, sounds, and smells made me feel like I was in the muggy summer weather right along side Molly.

This series has only gotten stronger with each entry. Don't hesitate to pick up this great book to be transported to another time and place.

A pleasant and pulse-quickening historical mystery5
Cozy writer Rhys Bowen takes us back to turn-of-the-century New York, where a vicious serial killer dubbed the East Side Ripper is loose, but amateur sleuth Molly Murphy has more important things to worry about.

Captain Daniel Sullivan has landed himself in jail. He admits to breaking the law --- a teeny, little inconsequential law: arranging a prizefight. Everyone loves a prizefight, including many members of the NYPD. So why is Daniel in the Tombs? Maybe it was the bribe the new police commissioner witnessed being passed to him. And it wasn't just any bribe either. This one led to the death of a New York City police officer. Now even the tight brotherhood of cops is against Daniel. He has nowhere to turn other than Molly, his recent paramour and an admittedly fine investigator. However, Molly is not feeling too friendly toward him right about now, considering his freshly discovered engagement to society deb Arabella Norton. A woman scorned and all...

But for deeply personal reasons, Molly relents and agrees to look into it. In her efforts to exonerate Captain Sullivan, Molly chases all over the Big Apple in the summer of 1902, braving scorching temperatures and dodging a rampant typhoid epidemic --- and the East Side Killer, who Molly decides may warrant a closer probe. While the police believe that the killer is targeting ladies of the evening, Molly is not so sure about that. Fortunately, her investigation follows a different angle than the official inquiry --- fortunately, since it has to be conducted with the utmost discretion. Cops aren't too crazy about outsiders meddling in their business.

Tiptoeing around the entire NYPD, unsure of whom to trust, Molly has her work cut out for her. And to further complicate things, she finds access to Daniel blocked at every turn. How can she possibly clear his name if she can't get information to and from him?

Real-life Sabella Goodwin, police matron, steps into Rhys Bowen's fictional world to assist Molly Murphy. Equally unflagging, the spunky and resolute Sabella soon steps squarely on somebody's toes and winds up clinging to life by a slim thread following a brutal attack, leaving Molly once again on her own to search the dark alleys and dangerous streets of the city.

Along come neighbors Sid and Gus, a pair of women with hearts full of adventure, cheerfully offering to lend a hand. While Molly is off tracking Sabella Goodwin's clues to the identity of the East Side Ripper, Sid and Gus head merrily out on the trail of a missing young woman. Meanwhile, how is any of this helping Daniel? None of them could have foreseen that their paths would take them all out to Coney Island. At least some of the answers appear to be hidden at the popular theme park teeming with swelling crowds, swooning women and roller coasters.

Reminiscent of Jessica Fletcher from the "Murder, She Wrote" television series, Molly Murphy may just be Jessica's historical counterpart. OH DANNY BOY is not exactly nail-biting suspense, but nonetheless is a pleasant pulse-quickener.

--- Reviewed by Kate Ayers

An avid reader5
Again Rhys Bowen has written an intriguing and well plotted gaslight mystery. Besides the suspenseful plot, Bowen keeps us up to date on Molly's personal life. This episode was an especially good one. I look forward to the next book in the series.