Midsummer
Malice
by Allen Simpson writing as M.D. Lake
(Avon, 1997) is the ninth mystery featuring Peggy O’Neill, a law enforcement
officer at an unnamed Minnesota university on the Mississippi River. Simpson was a professor of Scandinavian literature at
the University of Minnesota and then retired to write full time. Between 1989
and 1999 he released 10 O’Neill mysteries, winning the American Mystery Award for best original paperback
in 1992 for the fourth in the series, Poisoned Ivy.
On her
usual night patrol of the campus Peggy runs into Steadman George, a local shady
character known for his piano-playing, tall tales, and drinking. He offers her
a story about an off-the-books baby adoption he brokered 20 years ago and asks
her what he should do if the biological mother returns and wants to meet her
now grown daughter but doesn’t know where she is. He insists that the situation
is hypothetical but gives enough corroborative detail to make Peggy think
otherwise and to suggest he intends to somehow profit from it.
When
Steadman’s alcohol-filled body is pulled from the Mississippi a couple of
nights later, only Peggy thinks the death is not as accidental as it seems. She
wanted to believe that Steadman was truly on the wagon this time, as he had
claimed. In addition, she saw the silhouette of a second person in Steadman’s
quarters on the old riverboat he lived on the night he died, but none of his
usual cronies admitted seeing him then. Fearing the birth mother who has come
back to check on her daughter is also in danger, Peggy begins a frantic search
for her and for proof that Steadman’s drowning was deliberate.
As much of
a narrative analysis of the age-old issues surrounding adoption as a police
procedural, the story vividly portrays the perspectives of the birth mother,
adoptive mother, and the adopted daughter in addition to Peggy’s investigative
process. The question of to tell or not to tell about the adoption is examined
from all sides. Of course this book pre-dates the recent explosion of DNA
testing services, which has only created more questions and more surprises for
the people in the adoption triangle.
A solid
entry in a series that has been too soon forgotten.
·
Mass Market Paperback: 265 pages
·
Publisher: Avon
(December 1, 1997)
·
Language: English
·
ISBN-10: 0380787598
·
ISBN-13: 978-0380787593
Aubrey Hamilton ©2018
Aubrey Hamilton is a former librarian who works on Federal
IT projects by day and reads mysteries at night.
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