E is for Evidence

E is for Evidence

3 (1)
Edition: The Kinsey Millhone Alphabet Mysteries
Language: English
Format: Paperback
ISBN 10: 0312939035
ISBN 13: 9780312939038
Publication date: November 29th, 2005
Publisher: St. Martin's Paperbacks
Pages: 320

Genres: Mystery, Science Fiction, Children’s

No one writes a thriller like #1 New York Times bestselling author Sue Grafton. In E is for Evidence, P.I. Kinsey Millhone becomes the victim of a nasty frame-up…E IS FOR EX…Being a twice-divorced, happily independent loner has worked like a charm for P.I. Kinsey Millhone--until holiday weekends like this one roll around. What she needs is a little diversion to ward off the blues. She gets her much-needed distraction with a case that places her career on the line. And if that isn't enough to keep her busy, her ex-husband, who walked out on her eight years ago, pops back on the radar...E IS FOR ENEMY…It all begins with a $5,000 deposit made into Kinsey's bank account. Problem is she's not the one who deposited the money. But when she's accused of being on the take in an industrial arson case, Kinsey realizes someone is framing her…E IS FOR EVIDENCENow Kinsey's working for herself. But with new evidence--and corpses--surfacing around her, she's going to have to act quickly to clear her name before she loses her career, her reputation--and quite possibly her life…"'E' is also for excellent."--Cincinnati PostPublishers WeeklyWhile private detective and former cop Kinsey Millhone (``D'' Is for Deadbeat) is investigating a possible case of industrial arson involving a company owned by the family of a former schoolmate, someone tries to make it look as if she's on the take. A mysterious $5000 appears in her bank account. She sets out to clear herself, while two or possibly more cases of murder occur, including one by bombing. A Christmas spent alone and the reappearance of her second ex-husband, Daniel, who had deserted her, add to Kinsey's depression. Grafton has an accurate, wicked eye for California lifestyle and wise-cracking Kinsey is an appealing, nonhackneyed female detective. Particularly illuminating are the descriptions of document searches, which make up much of real detective work today. This fifth entry in the series, however, is not quite up to the standards of its predecessors because the motivation for the crimes seems weak. That caveat notwithstanding, readers will be glad that further letters of the alphabet await Grafton's imagination. (May)

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