P Is for Peril FROM OUR EDITORS
The Barnes & Noble Review
Sue Grafton continues her inexorable march through the alphabet with the
15th Kinsey Millhone mystery, P Is for Peril. Like its predecessors, Grafton's
latest is both an elegant entertainment and a first-rate private-eye novel
that honors and extends the tradition from which it springs.
The story begins when Kinsey, against her better judgment, accepts an
assignment from crusty interior designer Fiona Purcell. Fiona's ex-husband,
prominent Santa Theresa physician Dowan Purcell, has been missing for several
weeks. Chief administrator for a nursing home called Pacific Meadows, Purcell
left work at the usual time one Friday night and has not been heard from
since. Local police have made little or no progress in tracing him, and
Kinsey finds herself following in their footsteps, futilely attempting to
make sense of an elusive, increasingly remote event.
Kinsey's investigation takes her beneath the placid surface of a
respected doctor's life, revealing an unexpectedly problematic underside. The
Dowan Purcell who gradually emerges is a secret drinker with a propensity for
kinky sex. His second marriage -- to former stripper Crystal Muscoe -- has a
carefully concealed dark side that manifests itself in the rebellious
behavior of his troubled teenage stepdaughter, Leila. Purcell's professional
life proves equally problematic: Pacific Meadows is currently being
investigated for numerous counts of Medicare fraud. Picking her way slowly
through this lethal combination of elements, Kinsey searches, with typical
persistence, for the key to Dowan Purcell's disappearance.
Supplementing this central plot line is a secondary story that has
perilous implications of its own. While conducting a search for affordable
new office space, Kinsey stumbles across a rental opportunity that proves too
good to be true, placing her in dangerously close proximity to a pair of
fraternal landlords with undisclosed secrets of their own. Cutting
effortlessly back and forth between these interconnected narratives, Grafton
gives us yet another irresistible novel. Her bright, energetic prose, her
precise eye for character and landscape, and her virtually flawless sense of
pace come cleanly together once again, reaffirming Grafton's position as one
of the most engaging, consistently reliable suspense novelists working in
America today. (Bill Sheehan)
Bill Sheehan reviews horror, suspense, and science fiction for Cemetery Dance, The New York Review of Science Fiction, and other publications. His book-length critical study of the fiction of Peter Straub, At the Foot of the Story Tree, has been published by Subterranean Press (www.subterraneanpress.com).
FROM THE PUBLISHER
"Dr. Dowan Purcell had been missing for nine weeks when Kinsey got a call asking her to take on the case. A specialist in geriatric medicine, Purcell was a prominent member of the Santa Teresa medical community, and the police had done a thorough job. Purcell had no known enemies and seemed contented with his life. At the time of his disappearance, he was running a nursing care facility where both the staff and the patients loved him. He adored his second wife, Crystal, and doted on their two-year-old son." "It wasn't Crystal who called Kinsey. It was Purcell's ex-wife, Fiona. Everything about their meeting made Kinsey uneasy. Fiona's manner was high-handed and her expectations unrealistic. Kinsey's instincts told her to refuse the job, yet she ended up saying, "I'll do what I can, but I make no promises."" "It was a decision she'd live to regret." "Pursuing the mysterious disappearance of Purcell, Kinsey crashes into a wall of speculation. It seems everyone has a theory. The cops think he went on a bender and is too ashamed to come home. Fiona is sure he ran off to get away from Crystal, and Crystal is just as sure he's dead. The staff at the nursing home is convinced he's been kidnapped, and one of his daughters, having consulted a psychic, is certain that he's trapped in a dark place, though she doesn't know where. Kinsey is awash in explanations and sorely lacking in facts. Then pure chance leads her in another direction, and she soon finds herself in a dangerous shadow land, where duplicity and double-dealing are the reality and, with the truth glinting elusively out of reach, she must stake her life on a thin thread of intuition."--BOOK JACKET.
SYNOPSIS
Dr. Dowan Purcell had been missing for nine weeks when Kinsey got a call asking her to take on the case. A specialist in geriatric medicine, Purcell was a prominent member of the Santa Theresa medical community, and the police had done a thorough job. Purcell had no known enemies and seemed content with his life. At the time of his disappearance, he was running a nursing care facility where both the staff and the patients loved him. He adored his second wife, Crystal, and doted on their two-year-old son.
It wasn't Crystal who called Kinsey. It was Purcell's ex-wife, Fiona. Everything about their meeting made Kinsey uneasy. Fiona's manner was high-handed and her expectations unrealistic. Kinsey's instincts told her to refuse the job, yet she ended up saying, "I'll do what I can, but I make no promises."
It was a decision she'd live to regret.
Pursuing the mysterious disappearance of Purcell, Kinsey crashes into a wall of speculation. It seems everyone has a theory. The cops think he went on a bender and is too ashamed to come home. Fiona is sure he ran off to get away from Crystal, and Crystal is just as sure he's dead. The staff at the nursing home is convinced he's been kidnapped, and one of his daughters, having consulted a psychic, is certain that he's trapped in a dark place, though she doesn't know where. Kinsey is awash in explanations and sorely lacking in facts. Then pure chance leads her in another direction, and she soon finds herself in a dangerous shadow land, where duplicity and double-dealing are the reality and, with the truth glinting elusively out of reach, she must stake her life on a thin thread of intuition.
P Is for Peril: Kinsey Millhone's latest venture into the darker side of the human soul
FROM THE CRITICS
Library Journal
In her 15th alphabetical mystery, Grafton deserves an A for maintaining her series's high standard of excellence. This time private investigator Kinsey Milhone is hired by Dr. Fiona Purcell to find her ex-husband, Dowan, a prominent physician who vanished with his passport and $30,000 in cash nine weeks earlier. Wondering what she can do that the Santa Rosa police haven't done already, Kinsey takes the case and quickly discovers that the nursing home Purcell administered is being investigated for Medicare fraud. Was Purcell involved or did the facility's owners have something to do with his disappearance? And what about his second wife, ex-stripper Crystal, who Fiona believes is having an affair with her personal trainer? At the same time, Kinsey's losing streak with men continues as she is pursued romantically by her new office landlord's brother. Unfortunately for Kinsey, her new Mr. Right and his sibling are suspects in the murder of their parents. As usual, Grafton mixes an intriguing plot, well-developed characters, and humor into an entertaining summer read. [Previewed in Prepub Alert, LJ 12/00; a Literary Guild main selection.] Wilda Williams, "Library Journal" Copyright 2001 Cahners Business Information.
AudioFile
Kinsey Millhone encounters a double dose of danger while searching for new digs and uncovering the whereabouts of a missing doctor, possibly involved in welfare fraud. The story slugs along at first, until Kinsey hooks up with a deadly set of twins. Then, author Sue Grafton is back on her game. Judy Kaye so completely absorbs Kinsey's character that it becomes increasingly difficult to separate performance from persona. With her wisecracking observations, it's impossible to imagine anyone else as the streetwise sleuth. While Santa Theresa (AKA Santa Barbara) is Ross Macdonald territory, in her sixteenth Kinsey Millhone adventure, Grafton is no longer the new kid in town. S.J.H. © AudioFile 2001, Portland, Maine
Kirkus Reviews
Nine weeks after Dr. Dowan Purcell left the Pacific Meadows medical facility he administered, then vanished along with his passport and $30,000, his ex-wife Fiona, disgusted alike at the Santa Teresa Police Department's lack of progress on the case and the lackadaisical attitude of Dow's current wife, ex-stripper Crystal, calls in Kinsey Millhone. What can Kinsey do that the cops haven't or can't? She can rattle the cages at Crystal's place-where her messed-up teenaged daughter Leila and her personal trainer Clint Augustine take turns creating opportunities for gossip-and at Pacific Meadowswhere an investigation for Medicare fraud has blown some employees away and left the rest paranoid. Faced with the need to investigate not only Dow's big, quarrelsome family but Meadows moneymen Joel Glazer and Harvey Broadus, what's a shamus to do? Spend some quality time getting just a little too close to her new landlord's twin brother, of course, providing the heat behind Grafton's title while extending Kinsey's string of relationships with unsuitable men. After the narrow focus of Kinsey's last few alphabetical adventures, the generous canvas here is a joy, and if the wealth of characters and subplots prevents Grafton from keeping any of them in the frame for very long, the audaciously foreshortened denouement shows her heroine at her most beguiling. After twenty years updating the private-eye tradition, Grafton shows she can spin a classic yarn with all the breadth of her masters, and a sharper eye for detail than any of them.