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"C" is for Corpse (The Kinsey Millhone Alphabet Mysteries)
Sue Grafton

St. Martin's Paperbacks, 2005 - 320 pages

average customer review:based on 49 reviews
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   highly recommended  highly recommended






The one that got me started

3.5 stars (4 and above stars being - usually - reserved for the really great/unique books).
This is the first Kinsey I ever read, and initiated my interest in the Kinsey plots. The series is one helluva 'tell-it-like-it-is', Kinsey is a lovely character, and the mood is always comic-sombre (a bit down but never out - even while winning! noir style?). You can enjoy every book in the series - come rain or come sunshine.


"C" IS FOR COZY

I usually don't like to use the word "cozy" in describing a mystery because it makes me think I won't like it but I'd have to say that Grafton's alphabet series can only be described as such. There isn't much violence yet most of the stories do involve a murder. She has the knack for writing plausible yarns that keep the reader guessing until the very end. "C" Is For Corpse is no exception and was a very enjoyable read in my opinion

These are all quick reads and, while they can stand alone, it's more fun starting with "A" and following Kinsey's caseload from month to month. Grafton has written these books in such a way that when you finish one and start the next, only a matter of weeks have passed in Kinsey's life. I find the best time to read them is when you're craving something light and not too taxing on the brain yet written well enough to maintain your interest level. I have "D" Is For Deadbeat lined up next but I'll have to read a few "heavier" books first so that I can fully appreciate the relaxation I experience when reading the next letter in this alphabet series.


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Family secrets

Milhone meets a young man struggling with the effects of brain damage resulting from a car crash in which a friend was killed. He thinks someone is trying to kill him(....).
The publication date is 1986 and the action follows on that of B for Burglar (which may sound obvious but Grafton does not always have the plots in the series sequential and all are set in an eighties time-frame).
There's lot of Ross MacDonald in this. It's as much about families as about murder. The mother of Bobby the victim has been married twice before. Her latest husband, an idle foolish alcoholic, brings his daughter Kitty, an anorexic druggie, from a previous marriage. The Henry sub-plot is particularly strong in this (Henry is Kninsey Milhone's octogenarian landlord). I understand the abridgements of these novels leave Henry out. In a way it's a distraction but it neatly counterpoints the other family, as also does the family of Rick Bergen the boy killed in Bobby's first crash. A problem with Ross MacDonald was the way the book consisted of interview after interview and Grafton avoids that by breaking it up with the Henry plot.
I was a little surprised by the amount of socialization with a family by their doctors; not only their children's psychiatrist, but the forensic pathologist who autopsies family members. Maybe they do these things in California. Grafton is always accurate in her medical expertise. (The symptoms of traumatic brain damage are well-described here).
What is it that makes Grafton so great? I don't think it's primarily Milhone's character, memorable though that is. Her trademark is careful scene-setting. Her action moves quite slowly but we don't notice that because what holds it up is meticulous description of every place that Milhone is in and every character she meets. Detail is piled upon detail to create an exact picture that we can almost touch and feel. There are great writers who manage without this (who knows what an EM Forster character looks like) and there are poor writers who bore us with longwinded descriptions. Grafton is on her own.


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Grafton does it again

Going into the third Kinsey Millhone mystery I was almost certain that it couldn't possibly be as enjoyable as the first two. I guess I didn't really think that Grafton could keep it up, but I misjudged her. 'C' is for Corpse was equally gripping and fun to read as its predecessors. One of my favorite aspects of the series is the people that Kinsey meets along the way. Grafton's supporting cast is always lively and interesting - no matter how short their part. I would highly recommend this book, or any in the series for that matter, to anyone who likes mysteries - and even those who don't (I was never really a mystery fan until I discovered Grafton's books, so I'm sure anyone could enjoy them as well).


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reviews: 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, page 6, 7, 8, 9, 10



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