American/Cozy Mysteries

Essays:
§ Cozies: An Especially American Art Form
§ When is a Cozy not a Cozy?
Kenneth Abel
§ Cold Steel Rain
Alina Adams
§ Murder on Ice
Donna Andrews
§ The Penguin Who Knew Too Much
Nevada Barr
§ High Country
Larry Beinhart
§ The Librarian
Claudia Bishop and Don Bruns (editors)
§ A Merry Band of Murderers
Meredith Blevins
§ The Hummingbird Wizard
Lawrence Block
§ The Burglar in the Rye
Jan Brogan
§ A Confidential Source
Judy Clemens
§ The Day Will Come
Joan Coggin
§ Who Killed the Curate?
Jeffrey Cohen
§ As Dog is My Witness
§ Some Like it Hot-Buttered
Thomas Cook
§ Into the Web
Gordon Cotler
§ Artist’s Proof
Casey Daniels
§ Don of the Dead
Diane Mott Davidson
§ Dark Tort
§ Double Shot
Aaron Elkins
§ Good Blood
Sharon Fiffer
§ Buried Stuff
Kate Flora
§ Stalking Death
Christine Goff
§ A Rant of Ravens
Denise Hamilton
§ Last Lullaby
§ Savage Garden
§ Sugar Skull
David Handler
§ The Cold Blue Blood
Charlaine Harris
§ Grave Sight
§ Grave Surprise
§ Shakespeare’s Counselor
Rosemary Harris
§ Pushing Up Daisies
Ellen Hart
§ An Intimate Ghost
§ The Iron Girl
§ Night Vision
Libby Fischer Hellmann
§ An Image of Death
§ A Picture of Guilt
§ A Shot to Die For
Martha C. Lawrence
§ Ashes of Aries
Marc Lecard
§ Vinnie's Head
Laura Lippman
§ To the Power of Three
Mary Logue
§ Maiden Rock
Margaret Maron
§ Last Lessons of Summer
Sujata Massey
§ Girl in a Box
Alexander McCall-Smith
§ The #1 Ladies Detective Agency
Deborah Morgan
§ The Marriage Casket
§ The Weedless Widow
Marcia Muller
§ Cyanide Wells
Kem Nunn
§ Tijuana Straits
Nancy Pickard
§ The Virgin of Small Plains
David Skibbins
§ Eight of Swords
Jessica Speart
§ Blue Twilight
Julia Spencer-Fleming
§ All Mortal Flesh
§ A Fountain Filled With Blood
§ I Shall Not Want
§ In the Bleak Midwinter
§ Out of the Deep I Cry
§ To Darkness and to Death
Denise Swanson
§ Murder of a Sleeping Beauty
§ Murder of a Barbie and Ken
§ Murder of a Snake in the Grass
Sarah Stewart Taylor
§ Judgment of the Grave
§ Mansions of the Dead
§ O’ Artful Death
§ Still as Death
Elaine Viets
§ Dying to Call You
§ Just Murdered
§ Murder with Reservations
§ Murder Unleashed
§ Shop Till You Drop


A Confidential Source, Jan Brogan, Warner Books, $6.99.

Jan Brogan's second novel featuring reporter Hallie Ahern finds Hallie making a fresh start in the "small, crazy state" of Rhode Island, at the Providence Chronicle. She's come down from the heights of the Boston Globe after blowing a big story and is in recovery from a substance abuse problem. Her apartment is crappy, her best friend is her twelve step partner, she owes money to her mother, and the super ambitious, intelligent Hallie hates her new job. In a typical female written mystery novel, this would be a set up for a Cinderella style change, where the heroine uses her guts and brains to pull herself out of her hole. It might include some other memorable or eccentric female friends and even a cat. Author Jan Brogan obviously doesn't know these "rules" though, and she delivers a very "noir" novel with a heroine who makes so many wrong choices and decisions it's hard to keep up.

The book opens with a bang - Hallie is in her corner convenience market buying a lottery scratch ticket - when the owner, Barry Mazursky, is gunned down while she's in another part of the store. Hallie isn't a witness but had not only been fond of Barry, but had also gotten a look at the other people in the store right before the shooting. When Hallie goes into work to write a first person account of what happened as well as a sentimental memorial piece about the Barry she felt she knew, both Barry's secrets and Hallie's life begin to unravel. Hallie, an addictive personality in general, had been addicted to calling in to a semi sleazy late night radio talk show; when the host of the talk show gives her a tip she follows up on it, citing him as her "confidential source". Everything seems to go wrong after that. To research gambling, Hallie finds herself hooked; she trusts the wrong people and doesn't trust the right ones; and worst of all her story has such a huge factual hole in it that it sends her back to spelling-bee duty and deeper into debt. She couldn't be more depressed when she once again becomes a part of the story she was only wanting to report.

Hallie's ambition frequently gets in her way, but it also makes her a believable, if not always likable, character. This is a smart book with several twists and a really compelling ending that had me turning pages pretty quickly. The details of the reporters' life are very well done (and Brogan is herself a reporter) as are the details of life in Providence. She gives the city a personality that would do regional masters like Estleman or Lippman proud. With that as a caveat, I found myself sometimes distracted by the details and wanted more for Hallie personally, but that just proves that Brogan's a good writer: Hallie reads like a real person, and you end up wanting to know more about her. This is a distinctive and dark book, maybe not for the squeamish (Brogan can be a bit ruthless), but very well done and deserving of a closer look. (Robin)

Meet Jan Brogan when she comes in to sign books with P.J. Parrish on Thursday, July 13. For more on lotteries, try Barbara D'Amato's excellent Hard Luck.

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