Jane Stanton Hitchcock was initially a
playwright and screenwriter, and then she turned to crime fiction writing. She
is also an avid poker player who competes in the World Poker Tour and the World
Series of Poker. Her expertise in poker has a prominent place in her sixth
crime story, Bluff (Poisoned Pen Press, 2019).
Maud Warner,
born in New York to a wealthy family, wants revenge on the man who stole her
mother’s fortune and left her destitute. She complained about Burt Sklar for
years, while Burt refuted her accusations with calm condescension. He claimed
Maud’s mother made bad decisions that he couldn’t talk her out of. Maud knew
better but couldn’t prove it. The millions left by her stepfather simply
vanished under Sklar’s skillful manipulation, leaving the family penniless. It
was then that Maud discovered she had a knack for poker, and she made a steady
income from outbluffing players who underestimated her.
Maud decides
she will never bring Sklar to justice through legal means. She dresses in a
Saint Laurent suit with designer heels, walks into The Four Seasons restaurant
in Manhattan, and fires the pistol she carried in her tote at the man and his
lunch companion. She drops the gun and calmly leaves. No one thinks to stop her
and once on the street she takes the train to Baltimore, where she goes into
hiding with a poker buddy. Because no one notices older women, she moved around
as if she were invisible. The police could not find a trace of her.
From there
the story offers one surprise after another. Bigamy, fraud, and murder all
surface against the backdrop of frenetic New York society and gossip. This book
initially reminded me of the Miss Melville series by Evelyn E. Smith from the
1980s, but this narrative is far more complex than those entertaining tales and
just as rewarding.
There’s more
than a whiff of autobiography in this book. Hitchcock not only plays poker as
does her protagonist, but she also successfully brought legal action against an
accountant who defrauded her mother of her inheritance. She starred in an episode of American
Greed which shows how she alerted authorities to the larceny of
the celebrity accountant Kenneth Ira Starr. Starr was subsequently convicted
and served time in a federal prison in New York.
Winner of the 2019 Dashiell Hammett Prize for Literary Excellence in Crime Writing.
·
Publisher: Poisoned Pen Press (April
2, 2019)
·
Language: English
·
Hardcover: 264 pages
·
ISBN-10: 1464210675
· ISBN-13: 978-1464210679
Aubrey Hamilton ©2021
Aubrey Hamilton is a former librarian who works on
Federal It projects by day and reads mysteries at night.
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