Pahrump Valley Times Nye County's Largest Circulation Newspaper
CURRENT WEATHER: Clear, 57°




News
News
Opinion
Sports
Obituaries
Archives

Classifieds
All Classifieds
Employment
Real Estate
Autos
Merchandise

Our Newspaper
Archive
Columnists
Contact Us
How To Advertise
Subscriptions


 
Top Story

Jul. 30, 2008

'Obsessions' is a hometown-y book


TERRI SCHLICHENMEYER
The Bookworm Sez




Advertisement

At some point in your life, you made a promise to yourself.

Chances are, it started out as "Some day...."

Some day, I'll travel through Europe. Some day, I'll track down that classic car I wanted in high school. Some day, I'll learn to ski ... be brave enough to sing karaoke ... master a tricky recipe in the kitchen ... be somebody.

For Monona Quinn, her Someday Promise was to write a fiction book, maybe a mystery. In the new novel, "Obsessions" by Marshall Cook, she won't have to look very far. Everywhere Mo goes, a dead body appears.

The peaceful pine country of Northern Wisconsin seems like a good place to hold a writer's workshop. At least that's what Doug Stennett thinks when he plunks down money to buy his wife, Monona Quinn, a two-week workshop-in-the-woods.

It's not like Mo needs to learn to write; she once was a columnist for a Chicago newspaper and now she's the editor of a small-town local paper. No, what Mo needs is a vacation, and she and Doug need to work on their marriage.

Since no conference is complete without an author-in-residence, famous writer Fletcher Downs has been tapped to teach a class on mystery writing.

His name, affiliated with this workshop, has pulled in people from all over the Upper Midwest, but Downs is a curmudgeon and very much a womanizer. He hates everything about the North Woods, and his classes show it.

When they turn out to be self-promoting speeches about his books, some of the attendees are disgruntled. When Downs doesn't show up for his seminars, people are angry but no one is surprised.

They are surprised, however, by his death. Less than a week after the workshop started, Fletcher Downs is found beneath a pine tree, the back of his head smashed.

Although Doug makes Mo promise that she won't play Nancy Drew, Mo can't help herself. She had a hand in solving three crimes in the past, and now her reporter's instinct is telling her that this might not be a single killing.

The date of the murder rings a bell and Fletcher Downs' death could be one in a chain of crimes. Now Mo's obsession to solve them all just might have unlocked the clues.

Are you sick to death of violent mysteries filled with terror, blood, and gore? You won't find any of that here in this gentle, hometown-y whodunit.

Cook packs lots of characters into this book, but his main crime-solver, Monona Quinn, is likeable and believable, as is the supporting cast for this novel. While I had the culprit figured out pretty early, the reason for the murder was a nice surprise, believe it or not, and getting there was a lot of fun in the meantime.

If you're looking for a thriller that won't make you shiver under the covers or lock the doors, this is one to seek. "Obsessions" is a book you should promise yourself you'll read much sooner than "some day."

"Obsessions" by Marshall Cook, Bleak House Books, $24.95 hardcover/$14.95 paperback, 298 pages.














For comment or questions, please e-mail webmaster@pahrumpvalleytimes.com
Copyright © Pahrump Valley Times, 1997 -
| Privacy Policy