The world's best dog detective can't be taught his sleuthing skills. They're in his genes, passed down through the generations. Tramp realizes this while he's up for sale in the neighborhood pet store. He makes friends with an assortment of animals and yes, a human family that loves him. He soon dis
Tramp
β Scribed by Marne Davis Kellogg
- Book ID
- 110674801
- Publisher
- Knopf Doubleday Publishing Group
- Year
- 2012
- Tongue
- en-US
- Weight
- 664 KB
- Series
- Lilly Bennett #3
- Category
- Fiction
- ISBN-13
- 9780307808264
- ASIN
- B006XWYIWK
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
If Susan Isaacs had lived in the American West as an American WASP, she would have created Lilly Bennett.
By turns sassy and tough, tender and vulnerable, Lilly, a no-longer-so-young Wyoming belle with degrees in criminology and toxicology, is a private investigator and the marshal of Bennett's Fort, a town owned literally lock, stock, and barrel by her cousin.Β Β Shod by Chanel, clad in designer suits, and wearing ladylike white gloves, Lilly is an unlikely but highly efficient detectiveβas she proves when confronted with solving the murder by poisoning of Cyrus Vaile, the incredibly rich, disgustingly lecherous old patron of the local repertory theater.
It happens on the night of his birthday celebration, in full view of Lilly and most of his repertory "family," any one of whom might have a pretty good motive for wanting Cyrus dead.Β Β And with so much flamboyant emotion obscuring the facts like a theatrical fog, it isn't easy for Lilly to cut through the glycerin tears and get at the unvarnished truth.
In Lilly, her eccentric extended family (who made their money in two black cropsβoil and Angus cattle), and her dashing suitor Richard Jerome (an ex-Morgan banker turned opera impresario and professional team-roper), Marne Davis Kellogg has invented a fascinating cast of ongoing characters.Β Β In Tramp she has created a witty, twisty mystery that shows off each of their talents to perfection.
π SIMILAR VOLUMES
Using newspaper accounts and court records from the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, Joelle Biele's poems tell the personal stories of women who left their homes and families to tramp the roads and rails. Driven by poverty, abuse, or a desire for a better life, these women often encoun
EDITORIAL REVIEW: The four-time Hugo Award-winning author recounts his travels around the world, detailing, in a never-before-published account, his experiences in places ranging from New Orleans to the Panama Canal to the African veldt.