Stalking the Puzzle Lady (Puzzle Lady Mysteries)
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Average customer review:Product Description
Cora Felton may look like everyone’s favorite grandmother. But the white-haired, bespectacled Puzzle Lady swears, smokes, gambles, and is even dodgy on the subject of how many husbands she’s had. So it strikes her long-suffering niece Sherry Carter as amusing when Cora announces, “I’m tired of living a lie!”
The inspiration for this sudden burst of honesty is a promotion by Granville Grains featuring the Puzzle Lady on a bus tour of televised personal appearances. Cora can’t think of anything she’d like to do less–except maybe quit smoking–than travel the supermarkets of I-95 hawking the new and improved Corn Toasties to her legions of fans. And someone else mustn’t want her to go either, because they’ve left a knife planted in her front door with a crossword puzzle attached. But when Sherry solves the puzzle she can’t decide whether the enigmatic message is a threat, a love note, or– creepier still–both.
Like it or not, Cora and Sherry must take their show on the road, along with a makeshift TV crew that includes a smarmy producer with a bad hairpiece, an abrasive director, an overambitious publicist, and two overgrown child-actors with some very adult problems. Throw in a few uninvited guests, including a roly-poly munchkin who’s had an unrequited crush on Cora since high school and Sherry’s abusive ex-husband, and you don’t need to be a puzzle expert to know this trip is going to be murder!
From the Hardcover edition.
Product Details
- Amazon Sales Rank: #428345 in Books
- Published on: 2006-08-29
- Released on: 2006-08-29
- Original language: English
- Number of items: 1
- Binding: Mass Market Paperback
- 384 pages
Editorial Reviews
From Booklist
If sweet-looking, gray-haired Miss Marple cursed, smoked, and carried a gun in her purse, she'd be a ringer for Cora Felton, who has served Hall well as the heroine of several previous Puzzle Lady mysteries. This time he sends his protagonist on a media junket, which Cora finds singularly unpleasant, not only because she is forced to hawk cereal she detests but also because she is being followed by a fat, balding, former high-school classmate. Worse, someone has pinned a mysterious crossword to her front door--with a wicked-looking knife. When a young woman on tour with Cora is murdered, followed by more puzzles on the door and more murder, Cora acknowledges that there's more than cereal on her plate. Hall's rapid-fire repartee disintegrates into prolonged silliness at times, and the relationships between characters, obviously established in previous books, aren't always clearly reprised. But feisty, contentious Cora has plenty of quirky charm, which will continue to attract those who have enjoyed her sleuthing in the past. Stephanie Zvirin
Copyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved
Review
"The pleasure is in the wordplay, at which Hall is a master. Across and down, the word is C-U-T-E." — New York Times Book Review
"If sweet-looking, gray-haired Miss Marple cursed, smoked, and carried a gun in her purse, she’d be a ringer for Cora Felton." —Booklist
From the Hardcover edition.
About the Author
Nominated for the prestigious Edgar, Shamus, and Lefty awards, Parnell Hall is the author of six previous Puzzle Lady mysteries. He lives in New York City, where he is at work on his next Puzzle Lady mystery.
From the Hardcover edition.
Customer Reviews
The puzzle lady and murder on tour
Cora Felton, the puzzle lady, is on tour promoting Granville Grains' Corn Toasties cereal. They're doing televised personal appearances at supermarkets off I-95. Not her favorite thing.
Right before leaving, a crossword puzzle is pinned to her door with a knife. Cora's niece Sherry decides to accompany Cora to keep an eye on her and keep her safe.
An old acquaintance of Cora's appears at one of the stores. This isn't someone she wants to spend time with, so she doesn't. Then he shows up at another store. Sherry's abusive ex-husband shows up on the tour as well. Then a woman on the tour is found dead. The people believe it was an accident. Cora and Sherry believe it was murder.
Cora and Sherry set out to solve the murder, but can they find the murderer without putting themselves or anyone else in danger.
I always enjoy books in this series. Cora is so abrasive, but yet likable. Sherry is quiet and always keeping an eye on Cora. They make such a great team. The reporter that Sherry is dating always assists them and complements their detecting skills so well.
The TV crew in this book really add to the story with all their quirks. The fact that they're stuck at a motel while on tour but yet outsiders can come in and out helps keep the reader guessing on who the murderer is.
I highly recommend this book.
[...]
"It is a puzzlement," remarked His Majesty, the Yul of Siam
All things considered, one would not anticipate much of a demand for a series of mysteries in which the creator(s) of crossword puzzles endlessly stumble over puzzle-obsessed murderers. Nevertheless, there is not only one such a series in print, but two! And maybe, for all I know, a half-dozen more are lurking out there in the bush, as well. "Stalking the Puzzle Lady" is member of much the better of the two series.
Author Parnell Hall first came to my attention with a 1987 novel called "Detective," the first of a series featuring Stanley Hastings, a fairly ordinary Joe, fairly happily married, who is an underemployed, underpaid, unaspiring private detective struggling to write his first, long-delayed mystery novel. Much of the charm of the Hastings series was the author's obvious glee in placing his distinctly un-hard-boiled private eye into good, old, traditional hard-boiled plots, then leaving the harassed and often frightened Hastings to wriggle out as best he might.
From 1988 to 1992, Hall also published five books featuring somebody named Steve Winslow.
I remember good reviews for the Hastings books, but for the life of me I can't recall a thing about the Winslow series--or even if I ever found one to read. PI Stanley Hastings always struck me as all right guy but he was never really good hero-material, not the solid core for a lengthy series that could hope to extract much money from MY pockets. I am not privy to Hall's sales figures, of course, but it was my impression that the Hastings books were more likely to attract praise from connoisseurs than burst onto anybody's bestseller list.
That is why I suspect that about 1998, Hall or his agent or his publisher took a long, hard look at the mystery-buying public. And, I think, from that long, hard look, the Puzzle Lady series was born, for it is aimed not merely at one but at two distinct segments of the female demographic. Instead of the conventional cozy mystery team of heroine and sidekick, the Puzzle Lady series has what amounts to two heroines. One of them is a cozy mystery staple, a young woman beginning to achieve success and financial reward in an unusual profession. She has found a moderately attractive young man and their courtship can be (and has been) stretched from book to book to book, providing some handy continuity for the series. The other heroine is an elder relative with whom she shares a home, a woman who appears to be everyone's favorite grandmother, but whose character seems to be made of equal portions of Miss Marple, Zsa Zsa Gabor, Tugboat Annie and Ma Barker.
The gimmick of the series is that the younger woman, Sherry, is a successful creator of crossword puzzles who does not look the part, while the older, Cora despises the things, but looks exactly like the sort of person to create brain-twisters. In the tried-and-true tradition of "I've got the brains, you've got the looks, let's make money," the two exchange roles to make Cora the public face of the puzzles.
Preposterous? Yes. Does it work? You betcha! Okay, go figure, a puzzle-packing murderer (or something like it) turns up conveniently for each book. But so what? Cora is a genuine, dyspeptic hoot and Sherry can be fun, too.
The plots of these books, in common with many or even most cozy mysteries, are the least significant things about them. Suffice it to say that they are workmanlike and effective. The strength of such books is the entertaining way in which their heroines deal with the melodrama--the tsuris, if you will--tossed at them by the author. Cora and Sherry deal with it admirably.
The series has an additional asset that lifts it over the throng of competing cozies. Unlike the competent but plodding wordsmiths of most mysteries, Parnell Hall is a genuine writer. He routinely, and without any fuss, pulls off scenes that are simply not attempted by most cozy mystery writers. In Chapter 10, for instance what could be a major plot development is treated not as a discovery or as a source of fear but in the form of chitchat that would serve as well for a pair of "42nd Street" chorines primping for a date with a couple of well-heeled swells. Or this masterly bit of summarizing from Chapter 30:
"Okay," the cop named Jerry said. "Let me see if I've got this straight. The one guy was married to two of the girls, but not the blond girl. The other guy is dating two of the girls, including Blondie, and barely knows the other one. The girl who was married to the one guy and is dating the other is your niece. The girl who is married to the other guy is your niece's best friend. The guy who is dating your niece and used to go with the blond bombshell is a reporter. And the girl who looks like she just stepped out of a Victoria's Secret catalogue is a lawyer. Is that right?"
"Basically, I doubt if they'd appreciate being called girls, but that's their problem."
No-one could ever accuse the books of the Puzzle Lady series of being great literature, but they are certainly entertaining and expertly written. They stand well above the cozy mystery average. By the standards of their genre, they are worth five stars.
PUZZLE LADY AGAIN
It is a tradition for me to read a Puzzle Lady book every year. This one I enjoyed. Sometimes I read the Puzzle Lady mysteries and I hope that the media finds out that she isn't really the puzzle lady, and that her niece is the true puzzle lady. Then the books would be titled Old Fiesty Lady and the Puzzle Lady solve mysteries, and I would still read them. I like how each year the author writes the Puzzle Lady books with modern themes, such as using the web to Google a name and get information etc....




