Laura Lippman, The Sugar House (Avon, 2001) Having read this book way back when and now listening to it anew on audiobook, I can say Laura Lippman has fooled me twice with The Sugar House. Its plot is so labrynthian (but easy to follow) that it can indeed do that trick.
As the book opens, Tess's father asks her for a favor. A young female acquaintance of his, Ruthie, wants someone to investigate the death of her brother. Her brother was stabbed to death in prison. He was in prison for confessing to the murder of a teenage girl who, a year after the murder, still remains unidentified. Ruthie believes her brother was murdered to shut him up. She believes that by uncovering the identity of the dead girl, the motive to her brother's murder will be revealed. That's all the plot you need to know and, believe me, it's just the beginning as Tess begins to uncover information that leads to an ugly political conspiracy. As Tess plows ahead, she escapes traps, endures threats, dodges bullets and faces her father's wrath. But she WILL get to the bottom of this. And she does. Lippman is not a particularly deft prose stylist, but she is terrific storyteller. And that's plenty. ![]() |
![]() Rambles.NET book review by Dave Sturm 28 May 2011 Agree? Disagree? Send us your opinions! ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() |