List Price: $6.50
Our Price: $6.50
Availability: In stock soon. Order now to get in line. First come, first served.. *Eligible orders over $25 ship free.
This was a really enjoyable and fast mystery. The information on textiles was very interesting. The mystery has many twists, turns, and red herrings. Enjoy.
The plot was extremely confusing and uneven. It seemed to flop back and forth between two separate crimes and a totally unrelated situation while attempting to tie all them together...of which the author did a very poor job. And the conclusion was very lame, being we knew nothing about the person and had no reason to care about them. None of the characters were well-developed, including the ones we've met before in previous installments. I finished the book last night, and I'm still trying to put together in my mind all the pieces in this jumbled mess.
I do recommend this series, but don't start with this one...and don't worry about skipping it entirely.
After depositing her "client" with the Judge and his crew, Ginger passes the time waiting for the torturer to be returned to her by wandering the courthouse. She is stunned to observe that former childhood hero Professor Finnemeyer is on trial for a fraudulent antique scam. Ginger decides to investigate after she rids herself of her delinquent charge at the local train station. She soon finds that the witnesses for the prosecution have agendas to keep things quiet so that Finnemeyer will take the hit, but that her champion falls off the pedestal as he has a history of questionable, illegal behavior.
LIE LIKE A RUG is an amusing, very entertaining investigative tale because the heroine is so real she insures the plot remains genuine. Ryan is a great character who even hooks Ginger in his nasty way of dissing people. The rest of the support cast rounds out Ginger's latest adventure by reacting to her actions so that she seems even more like a person rather than a character. Donna Huston Murray continues to furnish pleasant novels filed with ginger that engross the reader's interest from start to finish.
Harriet Klausner