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The affliction  Cover Image Book Book

The affliction / Beth Gutcheon.

Summary:

Who killed the too-talkative teacher? Unlikely investigators Maggie Detweiler and Hope Babbin are just the characters to unmask a murderer.

Record details

  • ISBN: 9780062431998 (hc)
  • Physical Description: 353 pages ; 24 cm
  • Edition: First edition.
  • Publisher: New York : William Morrow, an imprint of HarperCollinsPublishers, 2018.
Subject: Murder > Investigation > Fiction.
Genre: Mystery fiction.

Available copies

Holds

  • 0 current holds with 0 total copies.
Show All Copies
Location Call Number / Copy Notes Barcode Shelving Location Holdable? Status Due Date
Kimberley Public Library F GUT (Text) 35137001011112 Adult Fiction Volume hold Available -
Castlegar Public Library MYS GUT (Text) 35146002068930 Mystery Volume hold Available -
Dawson Creek Municipal Public Library F GUT (Text) DCL172178 Adult Fiction Volume hold Available -
Kitimat Public Library Gut (Text) 32665002107276 Fiction Volume hold Available -
Nelson Public Library MYS GUT (Text) 3514830028060 Mystery & Crime Volume hold Available -
Pender Island Public Library MYS GUT (Text)
Format: Hardcover
33126000276729 Adult Mystery Volume hold Available -
Salt Spring Island Public Library MYS GUT (Text) 33123009629891 Mystery fiction Volume hold Available -
Tumbler Ridge Public Library AF GUTCH (Text) TRL23191 Adult Fiction Volume hold Available -

  • Booklist Reviews : Booklist Reviews 2017 December #1
    Humor and suspense in equal measure make for a delightful read in this second outing (following Death at Breakfast, 2016) for the well-heeled duo of Maggie Detweiler and Hope Babbin. Taking a break from her studies of Koine Greek at the New School, retired headmistress Maggie has undertaken the evaluation of a girls' boarding school on the Hudson River. Florence Meagher, a celebrated art-history teacher, has the Affliction—she cannot stop talking. Really! The school and its cozy little town are rife with resentments and secrets, and when Florence's body is found in the campus swimming pool, Maggie needs Hope and her uncanny way of reading people to determine who killed Florence to shut her up. Hope has been yawning through Silas Marner for her discussion group and is happy for an out. These women have extraordinary, often unexpected, ways and means. They even score tickets to see Hamilton. Recommend this to readers who like their detectives feisty and mature, in the tradition of M. C. Beaton's Agatha Raisin and the Rosemary & Thyme TV series. Copyright 2018 Booklist Reviews.
  • Kirkus Reviews : Kirkus Reviews 2018 February #1
    In this second mystery following two retiree friends with a knack for sleuthing (Death at Breakfast, 2016, etc.), a favorite teacher is found dead at a historic Hudson River Valley private school. Don't let the YA-inspired cover fool you. This is about how very serious and adult problems can be cultivated in the most innocent of settings. Complications are aplenty for the Rye Manor School for Girls, currently undergoing evaluation for possible closure, when art history teacher Florence Meagher goes missing. Former New York City private school head Maggie Detweiler is already on the premises as part of the evaluation, and she's quick to start her investigation and also to tell her friend Hope Babbin what's going on. When Florence is found dead in the school's Olympic-size pool by diving star and board-member daughter Lily Hollister, Hope leaves her book club in Boston to join Maggie on the hunt for clues. Everyone at the school is apparently aware of Florence's "affliction" 212;she was incapable of shutting up—but using this as a motive for murder seems thin considering readers get only a moment's exposure to it. Gutcheon wastes no time delving into other areas of suspicion, however, namely Florence's marriage to her insensitive husband, Ray, whose alibi for the evening doesn't check out. There's also her mentorship of troubled student Jesse, who has a tendency for violent behavior. The story is brimming with people in desperate situations, from school trustees to local business owners to students at their emotional limits. This second installment is a noticeable improvement on the first in terms of character development, but as Maggie and Hope home in on the individual they feel most likely to have silenced Florence for good, major plotlines get thrown by the wayside. The secretive affairs of Rye-on-Hudson are undoubtedly compelling, but don't expect conclusions for each downcast individual. A cozy grounded by realistic horrors, though t h e true affliction here is the untidy number of loose ends. Copyright Kirkus 2018 Kirkus/BPI Communications. All rights reserved.
  • Library Journal Reviews : LJ Reviews 2017 October #1

    New York Times best-selling author Gutcheon offers the second in a new series starring Maggie Detweiler, retired head of a prestigious New York City private school, and her effervescent friend Hope. Here, Maggie heads up a team evaluating the academic fitness of stumbling all-girls' school Rye Manor. When a teacher is found floating in the new pool, her neck snapped, Maggie calls in Hope for an investigation that plumbs an unhappy marriage, the school's troubled environment, and the town itself. With a 50,000-copy first printing.

    Copyright 2017 Library Journal.
  • Publishers Weekly Reviews : PW Reviews 2018 January #3

    Prospects look bleak for once-proud Rye Manor School for Girls in Rye-on-Hudson, N.Y.—and that's even before a teacher's body is discovered at the bottom of the pool—in Gutcheon's amiable if overly chatty sequel to 2016's Death at Breakfast. Fortunately for fledgling head of school Christina Liggett, retired New York City educator Maggie Detweiler, one of the members of the Independent School Association evaluation team on campus to determine the institution's fate, dabbles in detection, and before you can say "Jessica Fletcher," she and her partner in crime solving, socialite Hope Babbin, are on the case. Leveraging their curiosity and extensive social networks, the enterprising pair swiftly discover more suspects than Range Rovers in the wealthy hamlet, including trustees with unsavory conflicts of interest and a staffer's emotionally disturbed son, not to mention the victim's overbearing and under-alibied spouse. Plotting, unfortunately, isn't Gutcheon's strong suit—with the exception of a surprising and elegant denouement. Still, fans of caviar cozies will find much to savor. Agent: Emma Sweeney, Emma Sweeney Agency. (Mar.)

    Copyright 2018 Publishers Weekly.

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