From Publishers Weekly
In last year's well-received Posted to Death, James introduced a unique amateur sleuth: Simon Kirby-Jones, a respected historian and mystery author (under female pseudonyms), an American living his dream in a cozy English village-and a gay vampire, who controls his vampirism by popping pills. The fun continues as Simon, along with his adoring young aide, Sir Giles, attends a crime writer's conference at Kinsale House presided over by its domineering chatelaine, Lady Hermione. To his astonishment, Simon discovers that the featured speaker purports to be one of his nom de plumes, Dorinda Darlington. The thoroughly nasty literary agent shared by all should be the murderer's object, but she has too much on her clients, and it's the Dorinda imposter who ends up squashed by a stone urn pushed from the terrace. The often flippant humor, overdone British slang and superior posturings of the book's self-absorbed detective may not be to every taste, but fully developed characters and a well-designed plot amply compensate.Copyright 2003 Reed Business Information, Inc.
Faked to Death: A Simon Kirby-Jones Mystery FROM OUR EDITORS
The Barnes & Noble Review
As manager of one of America's largest mystery bookstores, talented writer Dean James keeps his finger on the pulse of the mystery field. The hero of his delightfully offbeat Simon Kirby-Jones series (Posted to Death) has good reasons of his own to keep the metaphorical blood flowing: He's a writer, too...and a vampire. Simon isn't out to bleed any of his potential readers, though, as medical science has conveniently provided a pill that takes care of all his nutritional needs. Instead, between needing only three hours of rest a night and saving all the time his kind once spent hunting for blood, Simon devotes himself to writing -- with a vengeance. He publishes in several different fields, under several different names -- and he keeps that secret more carefully in the closet than his sexual preferences. When his public persona, a noted historian and historical biographer, is invited to speak at a weeklong writer's conference hosted by the eccentric heiress of a local earl, it's more than any socially ambitious vampire can resist. But flattery turns to fury when Simon learns that one of the other speakers is a fake who's impersonating one of Simon's own reclusive alter egos. To make matters worse, it turns out the imposter is in the habit of blackmail -- but not good enough at it to avoid getting herself killed. For once, someone who thinks writing is murder isn't exaggerating! Sue Stone
FROM THE CRITICS
Publishers Weekly
In last year's well-received Posted to Death, James introduced a unique amateur sleuth: Simon Kirby-Jones, a respected historian and mystery author (under female pseudonyms), an American living his dream in a cozy English village-and a gay vampire, who controls his vampirism by popping pills. The fun continues as Simon, along with his adoring young aide, Sir Giles, attends a crime writer's conference at Kinsale House presided over by its domineering chatelaine, Lady Hermione. To his astonishment, Simon discovers that the featured speaker purports to be one of his nom de plumes, Dorinda Darlington. The thoroughly nasty literary agent shared by all should be the murderer's object, but she has too much on her clients, and it's the Dorinda imposter who ends up squashed by a stone urn pushed from the terrace. The often flippant humor, overdone British slang and superior posturings of the book's self-absorbed detective may not be to every taste, but fully developed characters and a well-designed plot amply compensate. (Apr. 8) FYI: James is the manager of Houston's Murder by the Book, as well as the author of two Southern mysteries, Cruel as the Grave and Closer than the Bones. Copyright 2003 Reed Business Information.
Library Journal
Just about everyone in this delightful cozy has a secret, and one Dorinda Darlington seems to have discovered them all. Before she can implement her blackmailing scheme, however, someone kills her during a writers' conference at pretentious Lady Hermione's stately (but garishly decorated) home. Series sleuth Simon Kirby-Jones (Posted to Death) has several secrets of his own: being gay and a vampire notwithstanding, he also uses the pen name Dorinda Darlington, so he knows that the woman is a fake. Cheeky prose, delicious innuendo and wit, the clever juxtaposition of characters, and a preposterous hero result in great entertainment. [The author is a former LJ reviewer.-Ed.] Copyright 2003 Reed Business Information.
Kirkus Reviews
In the quaint English village of Snupperton Mumsley, esteemed historian and author Simon Kirby-Jones has a closetful of skeletons. He pens historical romances under the pseudonym Daphne Deepwood and female private-eye novels as Dorinda Darlington. Unknown to both fans and friends, he's also a gay vampire. But it's Simon's dᄑclassᄑ literary pursuits that lead to trouble in his second outing (Posted to Death, 2002). Imperious Lady Hermione Kinsale corrals him into speaking and evaluating manuscripts at her annual writers' workshop at Kinsale House. Enlivening this otherwise dreary undertaking is the prospect of meeting fellow author and faculty member Dorinda Darlington. Yes! Realizing that someone has the audacity to pose as his nom de plume, Simon spends the days leading up to the workshop contemplating creative and embarrassing ways to expose her. With his equally gay and flirtatious secretary Giles in tow, he arrives at Kinsale House ready to rumble. During the Q&A following the faux Dorinda's lecture, Simon delivers a severe tongue-lashing, dramatically declaring her a fraud. Lady Hermione achieves a dᄑtente with the news that Simon's agent, the elegant pit bull Nina Yaknova, will be arriving shortly. But far from resolving the dispute, Nina fans the flames, and when the imposter is murdered, she becomes a prime suspect. Giles's and Simon's libidos turn somersaults when dreamy Inspector Robin Chase arrives to investigate them, Nina, and a full roster of loopy writer wannabes and pretentious faculty members. James's sophomore effort, though smoother than his debut, lacks the style or bite of truly effective parody. Agent: Nancy Yost/Lowenstein-Yost Associates