"I" is for Innocent (Kinsey Millhone Book 9)
Author | : | |
Rating | : | 4.38 (796 Votes) |
Asin | : | B002U2DQBQ |
Format Type | : | |
Number of Pages | : | 360 Pages |
Publish Date | : | 2015-09-24 |
Language | : | English |
DESCRIPTION:
Love Kinsey in every single book and this one was I've read just about all of the alphabetic series! Love Kinsey in every single book and this one was no different from the rest. Funny, sad, full of suspense and loads of laughter and a bit of every emotion. I'm really going to miss reading more about Kinsey once I complete the series.. D. P. Birkett said Amanita phalloides. Milhone has left California Fidelity. Lonnie Kingman gives her a much-needed job investigating a six year old murder. The probable killer was acquitted and the victim's family want to bring a civil action against him. Henry's older brother William has arrived and is invloved with Rosie. "I love every Sue Grafton book I have ever read" according to Amazon Customer. I love every Sue Grafton book I have ever read! Suspense, action, humor, human interest, real characters.she never lets you down!
But Kinsey may be voicing fans' hopes for "J" when she reflects midway through this case: "I wanted to feel like the old Kinsey again talkin' trash and kickin' butt." 300,000 first printing; Literary Guild and Mystery Guild main selections. Quickly finding holes in Shine's investigation, Kinsey uncovers a slew of suspects in Isabel's murder, including Voigt's second wife, Barney's first wife, Isabel's less attractive twin sister and even her best friend. From Publishers Weekly After the pace and invention of "H" Is for Homicide, Grafton sets Kinsey Milhone on a quieter, more cerebral path in the ever-appealing PI's newest abecedarian adventure, again set in Santa Teresa, Calif. Six years earlier, Barney was acquitted of murder charges in the still-unsolved death of his wealthy estranged wife Isabel, killed by a bullet fired through
Her most intricately plotted novel to date, it is layered in enough complexity to baffle even the cleverest among us.Lonnie Kingman is in a bind. Fast-paced. It comes as a bigger shock when she finds that every claim David Barney has made checks out. Funny. So it comes as a real shock when she finds his files in disarray, his key informant less than credible, and his witnesses denying ever having spoken with him. And very, very devious.. 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. As Kinsey comments on the give-and-take by which we humans deal with each other, for better and sometimes for worse, the reader is struck yet again by how acute a social observer Ms. Morley might have been careless about his health, but he was an old pro at the business. Readers of Sue Grafton's fiction know she never writes the same book twice, and "I" Is For Innocent is no exception. But if Barney didn't murder his wife, who did? It would seem the list of candidates is a long one. Grafton can be. The result is a trial novel without a trial and a crime novel that resists solution right to the end.When Kinsey Millhone agrees to take over Morley Shine's investigation, she thinks it is a