Storm Track by Margaret Maron

Margaret Maron is the creator of detective Sigrid Harald, the protagonist of a series of crime novels set in New York, and Judge Deborah Knott mysteries set in rural North Carolina.

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Storm Track by Margaret Maron


Features

  • Mass Market Paperback: 304 pages ; Dimensions (in inches): 0.85 x 6.74 x 4.22
  • Publisher: Warner Books; (May 2001)
  • ISBN: 0446609390


    Amazon.com
    When it comes to the weaving of tangled webs, you'll find none finer nor more deceptive than those on the loom of Margaret Maron's Storm Track, the seventh entry in her critically acclaimed Judge Deborah Knott mystery series.

    Colleton County, North Carolina, is home to Judge Knott, her moonshining daddy (the series opener, 1992's Bootlegger's Daughter, swept the Edgar Allen Poe, Anthony, Agatha, and Macavity awards in unprecedented fashion), and more brothers and cousins than hairs on a big dog's back. Likable young lawyer Jason Bullock lives there too, as does his lovely and--unbeknownst to him--extraordinarily unfaithful wife--an awkward situation all around, which turns even more so when she turns up dead in a local motel, wearing little more than whimsy and a wink:

    "Who would kill her, Reid?"

    "Hell, I don't know. Usually you'd say the husband, but Bullock was on the ball field, right? Millard King, too."

    "She slept with Millard King? When?"

    He shrugged. "Before me, after me, during me--I don't keep tabs."

    Clues abound, suspects emerge, and chief among them is the judge's cousin, Reid; a cad, certainly, but a killer? Judge Knott thinks not and sets out to prove it, as the body count rises and Hurricane Fran commences to lower the boom.

    A native North Carolinian, Maron opens a window onto the New South by concerning herself more with her multilayered characters and their intertwined lives than with overstyled prose or plot contrivances. An altogether satisfying mystery, Storm Track will surely propel readers straight through this series and into the prolific Maron's other series featuring Lt. Sigrid Harald, NYPD. --Michael Hudson --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.



    Reader Reviews
    Entertaining, September 15, 2002 Reviewer: A reader from Lakewood, Ohio United States I read this book on a recent plane trip. I've been reading Maron's Deborah Knott books since the beginning of the series and this is one of the better ones. I don't like the ending, though. It seemed too easy. One of the charms of this series how Maron talks about Knott's large family. You're actually able to tell her 12 brothers apart! And there are a few poignant passages about Knott's mother, who died when she was a teenager. In fact, the only book in the series that I really didn't enjoy was one that didn't discuss her family. It is called Killer Market and it is about the North Carolina furniture market. Anyway, this is a good book. It's not high literature, but it's not trying to be. It was entertaining and it gave me something to do during a boring plane ride (and it's nice that we have boring plane rides, isn't it?).

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