Hughes Community College in
Southeast Texas near Houston is a small college doing its best to survive. That
means the school and its President Dr. Fieldstone can’t afford and don’t want
any scandal. That includes possibly questionable artwork currently being
exhibited on campus.
Dr. Sally Good has spent six years
as head of the English and Fine Arts Division dealing with budget complaints,
political bickering and gossip, and the other stuff that is the bane of
academic heads everywhere. This is the first time she has been called in over
artwork. Dr. Fieldstone has summoned her along with several other people to his
office to deal with a complaint lodged by Roy Talon.
Talon is a local celebrity having
made his considerable fortune as an automobile dealer. There is a painting
of a goat being exhibited on campus as part of deal showcasing the work of
students in the prison outreach program. Bad enough that the goat itself is a
symbol of Satanism, according to Talon, but he believes that one can also see
“666” painted on the goat head. Upon closer examination of the painting, not
only do the staff members not see the sign of the beast, one goes so far to
suggest if there is anything it might be “911” making it a sign to call the
police.
As a taxpayer and very important
person, Talon wants the painting gone. In any institution, bosses handle difficult
issues by forming committees to study the problem and make recommendations.
Doing so spreads the responsibility around and absolves the boss from having to
upset any one group. Before long, the
idea is floated to have a newly created committee review entire exhibit to
consider if any of the works are Satanic and thus should be removed.
One of those involved in this mess
is the chair of the art department. The same department head who may have once
again been stepping out on his wife. The same department head who is soon found
very much dead in the art exhibit. When the local police seem to be ignoring
key pieces of evidence it is left to Dr. Sally Good to solve the crime in Murder
Is An Art: A Mystery by Bill Crider.
If you have read very many of author
Bill Crider’s books, you will notice that he often starts with something
relatively minor that either directly or indirectly leads to a murder. This is
especially true in his mysteries based in academia whether it is the Carl
Burns series or this one. He also blends in some misdirection with characters
that are a bit out there. There is more than one such character at work here
and Dr. Good’s observations about them are very funny.
My favorite in this one was Perry “A.
B. D.” Johnson who goes ballistic over just about anything on a daily basis. The
“A. B. D.” nickname stands for “All But Dissertation” as he has done the
entire graduate coursework and everything else required except for finishing
the dissertation. Every campus has at least one. Back in my days at the
University of Texas at Dallas there were at least two such people I knew of in
the Literature and History Departments. Both were very strange guys. One in
fact, who did lose his mind regarding a chair, so when reading the opening
pages of Murder is an Art: A Mystery where A. B. D. Johnson becomes quite
agitated over a chair it made this reader laugh out loud.
Laughing out loud is always a
frequent danger with any work by Texas author Bill Crider. Published in 1999 the
book may annoy some readers who expect the first body to fall by the third paragraph
at the very latest. Instead, that will come later as the author introduces us
to our fictional companions and sets the table for the mystery meal to come.
First in the Dr. Sally Good series, the read is occasionally funny while taking
numerous twists and turns to solve a murder or two and quite a lot more. Murder
is an Art: A Mystery is a solidly good read and one very much worthy of
your time.
Murder is an Art: A Mystery
Bill Crider
Thomas Dunne Books (St. Martin’s
Press)
April 1999
ISBN# 0-312-19927-9
Hardback (e-book available)
256 Pages
$21.95
Material supplied by the good folks
of the Plano Public Library System.
Kevin R. Tipple ©2016
Thanks, Kevin!
ReplyDeleteVery much enjoyed it and gload to say so.
ReplyDelete