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Kinsey
Millhone Series
A
is for Alibi
Laurence Fife was
a slick divorce lawyer and slippery ladies' man. Until someone
killed him. The jury believed that it was his pretty young wife
Nikki, so they sent her to prison for eight years. Now, Nikki's
out on parole and Kinsey Miihone is in for trouble. Nikki hires
Kinsey to discover who really killed her husband. But the trail
is eight years cold, and at the end is a chilling twist even Kinsey
doesn't suspect - a second eight-year-old murder and a brand new
corpse.
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| B
is for Burglar
Finding wealthy Elaine
Boldt seems like a quickie case to Kinsey Millhone. The flashy
widow was last seen wearing a $12,000 lynx coat, leaving her condo
in Santa Teresa for her condo in Boca Raton. But somewhere in
between, she vanished. Kinsey's case goes from puzzling to sinister
when a house is torched, an apartment is burgled of worthless
papers, the lynx coat comes back without Elaine, and her bridge
partner is found dead. Soon Kinsey's clues begin to form a capital
M - not for missing, but for murder: and plenty of it.
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| C
is for Corpse
Kinsey meets him
in the local gym. Bobby Callahan is a scarred young man struggling
back to life after a car forced his Porsche over the edge of a
canyon, battering his body and muddling his memory. All he remembers
is that someone, for some reason, tried to kill him. Desperate
for clues about his own past life and certain he is being stalked,
he asks Kinsey to protect him. Kinsey can't resist the brave kid
- and neither can the killers. Three days late Bobby is dead.
Kinsey Millhone never welshed on a deal. She'd been hired to stop
a killing. Now she'd find the killer.
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| D
is for Deadbeat
The client came to
Kinsey Millhone with an easy job - just deliver $25,000 to a fifteen-year-old
kid. A little odd, and a little too easy, but Kinsey took Alvin
Limardo's retainer check anyway. It turned out to be as phony
as he was. In real life, his name was John Daggett, a chronic
drunk with a record as long as your arm and a reputation for sleazy
deals. But he wasn't just a deadbeat. By the time Kinsey caught
up with him, he was a dead body - with a whole host of people
who were delighted to hear the news. But how do you make a stiff
pay up what he owes you?
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| E
is for Evidence
'E' is for evidence:
evidence planted, evidence lost. 'E' is for ex-lovers and evasions,
enemies and endings. For Kinsey, 'E' is for everything she stands
to lose if she can't exonerate herself: her license, her livelihood,
her good name. And so she takes on a new client: namely, Kinsey
Millhone, thirty-two and twice divorced, ex-cop and wisecracking
loner, a California private investigator with a penchant for lost
causes-one of which, it is to be hoped, is not herself.
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| F
is for Fugitive
Everyone knew the
kind of girl Jean Timberlake was - ask anybody in the sleepy surf
town of Floral Beach and they'd say Jean was wild, looking for
trouble. But she certainly wasn't looking for murder. She was
found dead on the beach seventeen years ago, and a rowdy ex-boyfriend
named Bailey Fowler was convicted of her murder and imprisoned
– and then Bailey escaped. Now private eye Kinsey Millhone steps
into a case that should have never been closed, in a town where
there's no such thing as a private investigation.
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| G
is for Gumshoe
Good and bad things
seem to be coming in threes for Kinsey Millhone: on her thirty-third
birthday she moves back into her renovated apartment, gets hired
to find an elderly lady supposedly living in the Mojave Desert
by herself, and makes the top of ex-con Tyrone Patty's hit list.
It's the last that convinces Kinsey even she can't handle whoever's
been hired to whack her, and she gets herself a bodyguard: Robert
Dietz, a Porsche-driving PI who takes guarding Kinsey's body very
seriously. With Dietz watching her for the merest sign of her
usual recklessness, Kinsey plunges into her case. And before it's
over, she'll unearth the gruesome truth about a long-buried betrayal
and, in the process, come fact-to-face with her own mortality
. . .
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| H
is for Homicide
His name was Parnell
Perkins, and until shortly after midnight, he'd been a claims
adjuster for California Fidelity. Then someone came along and
put paid to that line of work. And to any other. Parnell Perkins
had been shot at close range and left for dead in the parking
lot outside California Fidelity's offices. To the cops, it looked
like a robbery gone sour. To Kinsey Millhone, it looked like the
cops were walking away from the case. She didn't like the idea
that a colleague and sometime drinking companion had been murdered.
Or the idea that his murderer was loose and on the prowl. It made
her feel exposed. Vulnerable.
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| I
is for Innocent
Lonnie Kingman is
in a bind. He's smack in the middle of assembling a civil suit,
and the private investigator who was doing his pretrial legwork
has just dropped dead of a heart attack. In a matter of weeks
the court's statute of limitations will put paid to his case.
Five years ago David Barney walked when a jury acquitted him of
the murder of his rich wife, Isabelle. Now Kingman, acting as
attorney for the dead woman's ex-husband and their child (and
sure that the jury made a serious mistake), is trying to divest
David Barney of the profits of that murder. But time is running
out, and David Barney still swears he's innocent.
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| J
is for Judgement
"J" is for Jaffe:
Wendell Jaffe, dead these past five years. Or so it seemed until
his former insurance agent spotted him in the bar of a dusty little
resort halfway between Cabo San Lucas and La Paz. Five years ago,
when Jaffe's thirty-five-foot Fuji ketch was found drifting off
the Baja coast, it seemed a sure thing he'd gone overboard. The
note he left behind admitted he was flat broke, his business bankrupt,
his real estate gambit nothing but a huge Ponzi scheme about to
collapse, with criminal indictment certain to follow. When the
authorities soon after descended on his banks and his books, there
was nothing left: Jaffe had stripped the lot. But Jaffe wasn't
quite without assets. There was the $500,000 life insurance policy
made out to his wife and underwritten by California Fidelity.
With no corpse to prove death, however, the insurance company
was in no hurry to pay the claim. Dana Jaffe had to wait out the
statutory five years until her missing husband could be declared
legally dead. Just two months before Wendell Jaffe was sighted
in that dusty resort bar, California Fidelity finally paid in
full. Now they wanted the truth. And they were willing to hire
Kinsey Millhone to dig it up.
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| K
is for Killer
When Kinsey Millhone
answers her office door late one night, she lets in more darkness
than she realizes. Janice Kepler is a grieving mother who can't
let the death of her beautiful daughter Lorna alone. The police
agree that Lorna was murdered, but a suspect was never apprehended
and the trail is now ten months cold. Kinsey pieces together Lorna's
young life: a dull day job a the local water treatment plant spiced
by sidelines in prostitution and pornography. She tangles with
Lorna's friends: a local late-night DJ; a sweet, funny teenaged
hooker; Lorna's sloppy landlord and his exotic wife. But to find
out which one, if any, turned killer, Kinsey will have to inhabit
a netherworld from which she may never return.
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| L
is for Lawless
Kinsey's skills are
about to be sorely tested. She is about to meet her duplicitous
match in a couple of world-class prevaricators who quite literally
take her for the ride of her life. L Is for Lawless: Call it Kinsey
Millhone in bad company. Call it a mystery without a murder, a
treasure hunt without a map, a quest novel with truly mixed-up
motives. Call it the return of Kinsey as bad girl-quick-witted
and quicksilvery, smart-mouthed and smart-alecky-poking her nose
into everyone's dirty laundry as she joins up with a modern-day
Bonnie and Clyde in an Our Gang comedy that will take her halfway
across the country and leave her with a major headache and an
empty bank balance.
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| M
is for Malice
"M" is for money.
Lots of it. "M" is for Malek Construction, the $40 million company
that grew out of modest soil to become one of the big three in
California and, uniquely, remains in family hands. Eighteen years
ago, one of the sons of the family went missing. Now "M" is for
Millhone, hired to trace that missing black sheep. Though Kinsey
Millhone succeeds in her search, this prodigal son will find no
welcome at his family's table. And, in the all-too-common outcome
of familial hate "M" winds up standing for murder.
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| N
is for Noose
Kinsey Millhone is
about to put herself in the gravest jeopardy of her career as
she becomes the target, and an entire town seems in for the kill.
When Tom Newquist, a tough, honest, and respected detective in
the Nota Lake sheriff's office died suddenly, the townsfolk were
not surprised: Newquist worked too hard, smoked too much, and
exercised too little. That, plus an appetite for junk food made
him a poster boy for an American Heart Association campaign. Newquist's
widow didn't doubt the coroner's report. But Selma couldn't accept
not knowing what had so bothered Tom in the last six weeks of
his life - and the only way she'd get closure was if she found
out what it was that had made him prowl restlessly at night, that
had him brooding constantly. Kinsey should have dumped the case.
It was vague and hopeless - like looking for a needle in a haystack.
Instead, she set up shop in Nota Lake, where she found that looking
for a needle in a haystack can draw blood. Very likely, her own.
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O
is for Outlaw
The call
comes on a Monday morning from a guy who scavenges defaulted storage
units at auction. Last weekend he bought a stack. They had stuff
in them--Kinsey stuff. For thirty bucks, he'll sell her the lot.
Kinsey's never been one for personal possessions, but curiosity
wins out and she hands over a twenty (she may be curious but she
loves a bargain). What she finds amid childhood memorabilia is
an old undelivered letter. It will force her to reexamine her
beliefs about the breakup of that first marriage, about the honor
of that first husband, about an old unsolved murder. It will put
her life in the gravest peril.
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P is for Peril
Dr. Dowan Purcell had been missing for nine weeks when Kinsey got a call asking her to take on the case. A specialist in geriatric medicine, Purcell was a prominent member of the Santa Teresa medical community, and the police had done a thorough job. Purcell had no known enemies and seemed contented with his life. At the time of his disappearance, he was running a nursing care facility where both the staff and the patients loved him. He adored his second wife, Crystal, and doted on their two-year-old son. It wasn't Crystal who called Kinsey. It was Purcell's ex-wife, Fiona. Everything about their meeting made Kinsey uneasy. Fiona's manner was high-handed and her expectations unrealistic. Kinsey's instincts told her to refuse the job, yet she ended up saying, "I'll do what I can, but I make no promises". It was a decision she'd live to regret. Pursuing the mysterious disappearance of Purcell, Kinsey crashes into a wall of speculation. It seems everyone has a theory. The cops think he went on a bender and is too ashamed to come home. Fiona is sure he ran off to get away from Crystal, and Crystal is just as sure he's dead. The staff at the nursing home is convinced he's been kidnapped, and one of his daughters, having consulted a psychic, is certain that he's trapped in a dark place, though she doesn't know where. Kinsey is awash in explanations and sorely lacking in facts. Then pure chance leads her in another direction, and she soon finds herself in a dangerous shadow land, where duplicity and double-dealing are the reality and, with the truth glinting elusively out of reach, she must stake her life on a thin thread of intuition.
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Q is for Quarry
She was a "Jane Doe," an unidentified white female whose decomposed body was discovered near a quarry off California's Highway 1. The case fell to the Santa Teresa County Sheriff's Department, but the detectives had little to go on. The woman was young, her hands were bound with a length of wire, there were multiple stab wounds, and her throat had been slashed. After months of investigation, the murder remained unsolved. That was eighteen years ago. Now the two men who found the body, both nearing the end of long careers in law enforcement, want one last shot at the case. Old and ill, they need someone to help with their legwork and they turn to Kinsey Millhone. They will, they tell her, find closure if they can just identify the victim. Kinsey is intrigued and agrees to the job. But revisiting the past can be a dangerous business, and what begins with the pursuit of Jane Doe's real identity ends in a high-risk hunt for her killer.
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