Booklist
"Frommer is a brisk and clean writer, and she handles the rueful ambivalence of middle age very well indeed."
Publishers Weekly
"Expect plenty of cozy chills. . ."
Book Description
Sight Unseen A Christmas sojourn to the scenic Swedish-American community of Bishop Hill serves as both a belated honeymoon for Indiana newlyweds Joan Spencer and husband, Lieutenant Fred Lundquist--and a chance for Fred to check up on his mother, Helga, whose battle with Alzheimer's is beginning to take its toll on the family. For Joan, meeting her spirited mother-in-law turns out to be murder, literally, when the body of a local man is found in the snow and a terrified Mrs. Lundquist appears to have witnessed the vicious crime when she wandered off during one of her "bad" days. Too disoriented to clearly identify the killer, Helga is nonetheless too big a threat for the murderer to leave alone. With Helga's life in danger, Joan races to sort out which secrets are worth killing for in this peaceful hamlet.
Witness in Bishop Hill ( Worldwide Mystery Series) FROM THE PUBLISHER
"Things have finally calmed down enough for cozy heroine Joan Spencer and her new husband, Lt. Fred Lundquist, to take a long-delayed honeymoon to celebrate their three-month-old nuptials. Of course, it won't be a traditional honeymoon, since they'll have Joan's teenage son, Andrew, in tow, and the fact that they are using the trip to finally visit Fred's family makes it even more unusual. But Joan is happy; she'll get some time away with her family, and she'll finally get to see the tiny historic Swedish-American community where Fred grew up, Bishop Hill." Unfortunately for Joan, neither her honeymoon nor her trip works out quite as she'd hoped. For starters, Fred's mother is farther down the road to Alzheimer's than they had been led to believe, and dealing with her illness turns out to be a tough test for their new family. The worst is yet to come when Mrs. Lundquist witnesses a brutal murder but is a little too disoriented to be clear in her description of the killer. Suddenly everyone in the small village is a suspect, and the only person with the key to unlock the mystery is an elderly woman who floats in and out of clarity, often undetected. Joan will have to get close enough to her mother-in-law to figure out what really happened that night and to protect her and her extended family from a killer who is bound to strike again.
FROM THE CRITICS
Publishers Weekly
When Joan and new husband Lt. Fred Lundquist travel to Bishop Hill for a belated honeymoon, the only witness to murder in the small Swedish-American community is Fred's Alzheimer's-afflicted mother in Witness in Bishop Hill, Sara Hoskinson Frommer's (The Vanishing Violinist) latest appealing Joan Spencer mystery. Expect plenty of cozy chills as Joan strives to prevent a vicious killer from striking again. Agent, Stuart Krichevsky.
Kirkus Reviews
What if the only witness to a murder is in the early stages of Alzheimerᄑs disease? Detective Lieutenant Fred Lundquist and his second wife Joan, director of the senior center in Oliver, Indiana, are confronted with just this scenario when Fredᄑs mother, Helga, wanders from her home in the tiny Swedish-American hamlet of Bishop Hill, Illinois, and bumps smack into a big man whacking another man to death with a tree branch. While Fred, Joan, her college-age son Andrew, and Helgaᄑs often napping husband Oscar grapple with Helgaᄑs unreliable memory and tendency to roam and forget where she lives, the big man begins phoning the Lundquist home and whispering threats. His victim, meanwhile, has been identified as Gus Friberg, a career army man whoᄑs the son of the Lundquist neighbors Nels, a heavy drinker, and Ingrid, the wife heᄑs browbeaten into compliance. As tiny Bishop Hills prepares for an old-fashioned Christmas with all the Swedish trimmings, two different women claim to be fiancᄑes of the late Gus. One of them will wind up dead in a ravine, and Helga will drift in and out mentally and lose her way once more before Joan, in an unlikely "aha!" moment, identifies the murderer after a Christmas carol service. A far testier Joan than usual (The Vanishing Violinist, 1999, etc.), though Fred and Andrew have settled into a companionable relationship. Lots of Swedish trinkets and foods on view, and even Swedish lyrics to sing along with, but the prize here is the gently effective interpretation of the Alzheimerᄑs scourge.