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   Book Info

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The Ferryman Will Be There  
Author: Rosemary Aubert
ISBN: 0425184021
Format: Handover
Publish Date: June, 2005
 
     
     
   Book Review

From Publishers Weekly
Canadian Aubert's third Ellis Portal mystery (Free Reign; The Feast of Stephen) is a well-written, if pedestrian, descent into the world of homeless young women. A professional criminologist, the author brings compassionate insight into the pathetic, often terrible, people who inhabit this underworld. These insights, alas, are the high points of the story. Middle-aged detective Ellis Portal, a former judge who fell from grace through drink and drugs, wound up homeless on the streets and re-ascended to the edge of respectability, helps his friend, Det. Sgt. Matt West, to locate a young woman, Carrie Simm. Her father, a Toronto movie producer, was murdered in front of her, in full view of hundreds of people, at a film premiere. Possibly fearing for her own life, Carrie disappeared. She has a history of running away, and West suspects she's hiding with her homeless women companions. He asks Portal to use his contacts to locate her. No surprise Portal soon finds himself looking for a lot more than a missing girl. Too much, perhaps. Aubert introduces so many characters and concerns that Carrie almost becomes a McGuffin. Bland, whiny and self-absorbed, Portal endlessly relives his rise and fall, while his success as a detective is entirely due to incredible luck. Both he and West make some stupid errors in judgment. The worst judgment of all is the author's: her killer never could have gotten away with the method Aubert chooses. A consistently readable, often interesting, but ultimately disappointing book. (June 1)best mystery novel of 1999.Copyright 2001 Cahners Business Information, Inc.

From Booklist
Readers who have been starved for a follow-up to Aubert's sumptuous Feast of Stephen (1999) need wait no longer. The third entry in the Toronto-based series takes us further into the fascinating life of former judge Ellis Portal, who, approaching 60, is making his way slowly back into society after a dramatic fall from grace that left him temporarily homeless. Even though he has come into money again, Portal's problems are far from over. While trying to reestablish a relationship with his estranged son, Jeffrey, Portal loses his current home, a rented room in a boardinghouse run by an enigmatic, street-smart young girl. Meanwhile, police detective Matt West recruits Portal's aid in finding the missing daughter of a murdered Toronto film director, which requires the judge to solicit the trust of a group of young female gang members. Portal's indomitable integrity and checkered past make his ministrations to the troubled girls utterly believable and moving. This is quickly becoming a very special series. Jenny McLarin
Copyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved




The Ferryman Will Be There

FROM THE PUBLISHER

"In The Ferryman Will Be There, Ellis Portal is recruited by Toronto police detective Matt West to help after a famous movie director, filming in Toronto, is murdered in full view of fans as he arrives to attend a premiere, and his teenage daughter disappears immediately afterward. The search and the solving of the crime take Ellis from the glamorous film world into the violent nether worlds of the drug trade and the exploitation and trafficking in women." "His search for the murder victim's missing daughter also takes him into the urban haunts of the homeless and to caves in the Don River Valley, the wilderness preserve that runs through the heart of Toronto and was the setting of Aubert's first Ellis Portal mystery, Free Reign. Ellis knew these surroundings well from the days, following his fall from respectability as judge, when he lived among the homeless himself for awhile."--BOOK JACKET.

     



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