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The Alpine Obituary
Mary Daheim

Ballantine Books, 2002 - 320 pages

average customer review:based on 8 reviews
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   highly recommended  highly recommended





Nice Series Entry

As I have stated before, I do like this Mary Daheim series much better than the Bed and Breakfast series. The characters in this one are much more believable and the situations much more real-to-life. This episode revolves around a local judge getting a poison pen letter threatening her with exposure of a dark secret, about which she hasn't a clue. Ms. Daheim interweaves the current mystery with snippets from the past involving ancestors of the current Alpine residents, particularly those about which the story includes. She does a credible job with tying it all together and there were several aspects of this particular story I liked: Ed Bronsky, a character I do not care about, appears only in one scene; the story involves mostly Emma, Vida, and Milo; Emma is getting over the death of Tom. I would recommend this series to any mystery lover.


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Not her best "Alpine" book

After writing volumes "A" through "O" of the Alpine series, Mary Daheim is stretching the story lines a bit thinly. In this entry Emma is still depressed over the death of her lover in the previous book. A local judge receives threatening letters which she asks Emma to investigate, while one of the judge's distant relatives is killed. Emma feels that the two cases are related and she begins the investigation with the help of her friend Vida and Sheriff Milo. This series may make it all the way to "Z", but it will be a stretch.









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Great Storyline

I loved this book (as I have loved the rest of the series) The characters are well drawn and believable, the mysteries are well plotted and after you've read a few of the books you start to feel as if you know these people. Great writing, good storyline. I recommend this book, and series, to everyone who enjoys a good mystery


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A worthy addition to the series...

It is always a pleasure to return to Alpine..I hope the next installment comes out soon. I only wish that Ms. Daheim's Bed and Breakfast series was as well written!


A New Beginning

It's been a year since Tom Cavanaugh was murdered, and died in Emma's arms.

Emma Lord, owner and editor of the Alpine Advocate is not doing so well. She and Tom had an affair which produced her son Adam and she then waited almost 30 years for him to marry her. Now she feels as if her life is over and nothing interests her.

Her priest brother, Ben whose parish is in Tuba City, Arizona, invites her to go to Italy with him where he has a conference, but she doesn't really want to go anywhere.

And she's worried about her son, Adam, who's a newly ordained priest and his parish is in Northern Alaska, where he has to worry about dying of cold or polar bears.

Judge Marsha Foster-Klein, who was the judge at the trial of Tom's killer, asks a favor of Emma, she's got a threatening letter and would like Emma to investigate it.

At first Emma doesn't want to do it, but Vida finally convinces her to do it. The letter claims the Judge will never get her appointment because of things that had happened in the past, and included was an old photograph showing a railroad trestle with a rope hanging from it. The photo is probably 90 years old and none of them know what it means.

Then at the funeral of Jack Froland, Miles Dodge, the sheriff drives up and stops the burial. There are suspicions that Jack, a man in his 80's who was dying of cancer, may have been murdered.

And if that wasn't enought, a forest fire starts and after it's over, a dead body is found.

How these three storylines are intertwined, along with a fourth storyline, which takes place in 1916-1917, showing ancestors of many of the people involved in the modern story and explains what the photograph means, is a fascinating mystery which Emma finds difficult to solve.

Highligts:

Jack Froland funeral announcement which says "Come See Jack In The Box."

Milo asking Emma after a home cooked meal if it would help her if they went to bed together?

The fact that Milo is so obviously in love with her and seems to be taking her role in the unrequited love department.

The character's in this series are so real, that you just ache for them.

Spencer Fleetwood - owner of the new radio station in town, who keeps scooping Emma on all the stories.

Lowlights:

Tom Cavanaugh - I never liked this character. (See my review of the early books in this series) but I wanted Emma to dump him, not be devestated by having him die.

Where is everybody? You barely see Ginny Burmeister the office manager, Leo Walsh, the Ad Manager. The new reporter Scott Chamoud is more involved but Emma's old reporter Carla, who was a great character is barely mentioned. Only Vida is prominant in the story and she is beginning to be a little overwhelming and turning somewhat unlikeable.

I don't have the next book in the series yet, but ordered it the other day and can hardly wait for it to get here. I've been on vacation this week and have read more than half of this series in the last week. It was almost impossible to stop reading these books, once I started.


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reviews: page 1, 2



From USA Today and Seattle Times bestselling author Mary Daheim comes the newest Pacific Northwest crime novel starring the indefatigable newspaper editor-publisher Emma Lord.

THE ALPINE OBITUARY

Not even in Alpine, Washington, could the death of octogenarian Jack Froland be considered big news?except by his drinking buddies at Mugs Ahoy. But that suddenly changes when in the middle of his funeral, Jack?s widow hysterically insists that he was murdered.

Emma Lord, publisher of The Alpine Advocate, who is already investigating a threatening letter received by the town?s beautiful blonde judge, now suspects she has two hot stories to unravel. Backed by her House and Home editor, that bottomless repository of scandal, Vida Runkel, she prepares for a triple-threat special: murder, blackmail, and?as wildfire sweeps the mountainside?possible arson as well. But success will not come cheap. With a killer roaming the woods, it may cost Emma her life. . . .

In The Alpine Obituary Mary Daheim demonstrates once again why she is a nationally bestselling author acclaimed for her ?smoothly readable style? (Ellery Queen?s Mystery Magazine) and her ?witty one-liners and amusing characterizations? (Publishers Weekly).


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