Circle in the Water: A Sharon McCone Mystery
by Marcia Muller finds Sharon working a complicated case involving private
street ownership. In San Franciso, there are more than 200 streets that are
owned by private individuals or entities. As these streets are not city
property, they are lucrative targets for land speculators and others.
As the book opens, it is almost midnight Halloween,
and Sharon McCone is on a stake out. Being a co-owner of the agency with her
husband, Hy Ripinsky, who is currently overseas, she is out in the rain so that
she does not have to fool with trick-or-treaters and somebody else does not
miss a party or spending time with their kids this dark night. The rain fits
her mood. One that she has been in for months now. A mood that she can’t really
explain to herself or others that have noticed.
She is on Rowan Court trying to prevent another
vandalism attack. McCone & Ripinsky International has been hired by the
wealthy homeowners on the street to stop a rash of vandalism that has been
happening to their homes and vehicles. Not just stop it, but identify the
culprits and why they are doing it. One of their members has been reaching out
to other folks and have discovered that this sort of thing is happening on
other private streets, rich and poor, across the city.
Soon McCone finds things are linked across various
neighborhoods. Events start to move forward and become deadly.
Circle in the Water: A Sharon McCone Mystery
is a complicated and often slow-moving read. At least a third of the book, if
not more, consists of reminisces of previous cases and things that happened to
McCone, Hy, and many others in the past, and an acknowledgment and recognition
of how far all those involved have come in the here and now. Even if one had
not seen the guest post by the author at SleuthSayers
announcing this book is the end of the series, it is clear with the way the
book unfolds for the reader.
It is also a good read. The case is complicated and chugs along at a semi steady pace between the many memories of the past. Circle in the Water: A Sharon McCone Mystery ends the series well.
My ARC reading copy came from the publisher, Grand
Central Publishing, via NetGalley with no expectation of a review.
Kevin R. Tipple ©2024
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