One of my favorite photos from the past. A native American Woman in AZ doing a basket dance in 2014
Thomasina in Tom Stoppard's mind bending time warping play, ARCADIA, observes that when you stir raspberry jam into vanilla pudding it will first swirl in streaks but ultimately will turn the entire pudding pink. If you stir the pudding in the opposite direction, the jam will not separate back out again. --LIFE MOVES ONLY FORWARD--NEVER BACK!--
SHOWSTOPPER by Peter Lovesey is what I call a quicker picker
upper mystery. I happened on it on the new book shelf at the library and
because it was short, about show business, and set in my favorite locale
(Britain), I took a gamble.
Peter Diamond is a detective in the historic town of Bath.
He is having his own age-related emotional problems and when his superior
orders him to stop mucking about in a popular TV show’s remarkable run of bad
luck and instead order his team to start taking courses in more modern
detection methods, he interprets this an attempt to force his own retirement.
Then, in a stroke of luck, the media find legs in a story
about the TV shows string of accidents, disappearances, and deaths. Diamond’s boss is now
convinced that if this is a big story, her department has to solve the mystery
in order keep the public happy with the police department. In a flash Diamond
has encouragement from the top and a big budget to either prove that all the
problems were accidental or to find and arrest a serial executioner who is running
amuck.
The bad luck angle is quickly discarded and it begins to appear more likely that someone has a dangerous grudge against the show or the personnel involved in making it. While his team researches backgrounds, Diamond carries out suspect interviews with the current star, her stunt double, the producer, the director, and an assortment of gaffers, grips, and production assistants. While the entertainment industry characters are pretty common stereotypes, there is also a strange itinerant tramp who has managed to be in Bath every time nasty incidents have occurred. He is by far the most interesting character when placed against the uppity star, the super organized director with a strange home life, the talented writer who can’t refuse a drink, and an assortment of disgruntled former employees and current worker bees. The prose is competent, but rather sparse on color and atmosphere in my estimation. The setting in the historic town of Bath seems to get a shorter shrift than it deserves.
On the positive side there is some humor. One of the nicest bits is the desperate
search by divers at a river marina for evidence of human remains that finds
everything but. And you can safely recommend the book to your grandmother. It is well
within the “cozy" mystery” genre. The twists and turns at the end show why Mr. Lovesey
is a pretty fair plot creator, but I balk at a book jacket flack calling him
one of the “finest exponents of golden age fiction.” Give it 2.5 stars and choose only if Louise
Penny or Elizabeth George are not available.
Andrew McCall Smith is up to his old tricks again in this the umpteenth entry in the long-running No. 1 Ladies‘ Detective Agency series. W...