Detailed item info | Size | | Length: | 308 pages | | Height: | 9.8 in. | | Width: | 9.0 in. | | Thickness: | 1.2 in. | | Weight: | 21.6 oz. |
| | Publisher's Note | Having a sister means "always" having to say you're sorry! That's the motto of this outrageously witty novel about two sisters whose sibling rivalry knows no bounds.
| | Industry reviews | Soap opera writer and New Yorker Deborah Peltz doesn't hesitate to quit her job and move to Florida when her mother has a heart attack. If only supporting mom didn't mean having to get along with her thrice-divorced sister, Sharon. But Deborah and Sharon do find it a bit easier to act like devoted siblings when they are discovered standing over the body of their mother's caddish cardiologist and realize that they are one another's alibis for murder. Fans of Heller's comic novels (Infernal Affairs, LJ 2/1/96; Princess Charming, Kensington, 1997) will be delighted with her latest. This is an entertaining and amusing story, and if the identity of the murderer is a bit obvious, readers will be smiling so broadly they'll be able to ignore this flaw in an otherwise enjoyable tale. Highly recommended for public libraries. Elizabeth Mary Mellett, Brookline P.L., MA Dirda
With the snappy style her readers have come to expect, Heller (Princess Charming; Crystal Clear) presents another breezy tale of modern women; this one explores the bitterly antagonistic relationship between two sisters, and the murder mystery they become embroiled in. Deborah Peltz, 43, a soap-opera writer living in New York, gets fed up with big city life and moves to Stuart, Fla., where her mother lives. Unfortunately for Deborah, older sister Sharon, a fortune-hunting, desperate three-time divorc?e, also lives there. Sharon has always resented Deborah, both for being born and for making the high school cheerleading squad. Their feud is petty and regenerative, and neither sister is willing to let it go, but when the two women aim to seduce the same man only to find him murdered, a new alliance must be forged. The situation turns Deborah into an amateur sleuth and puts Sharon in the hands of a murderer, but the mystery here is not particularly complex or suspenseful. Heller focuses instead on the bickering between the sisters, continuously driving home the maxim that "having a sister means always having to say you're sorry." Heller's female characters suffer a particularly harsh comic treatment, most of them obsessed with money, men, shoes or social position. One only hopes that Heller's humor is tongue-in-cheek when the supposedly worldly Deborah is forced to say things like "the Big Apple had its share of Bad Apples." Heller writes briskly and cheerfully, and readers looking for light fiction with a decidedly contemporary theme probably won't be disappointed at the simplicity of her unfettered characters and implausible plot. Agent, Ellen Levine. (May) Dirda
|
|
Portions of this page Copyright 1995 - 2009 Muze Inc.  All rights reserved. |