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Kindness of Strangers (Skip Langdon Novels (Paperback))

Kindness of Strangers (Skip Langdon Novels (Paperback))

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Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Gripping and engrossing
Review: Errol Jacomine is running for mayor. Jacomine is a preacher who many hope to be the savior who will unite a New Orleans divided by race, greed and corruption. New Orleans Police Detective Skip Langdon has met Jacomine and can see his evil. On temporary leave from the force, New Orleans Police Detective Skip Langdon becomes obsessed with exposing Errol Jacomine. As she battles an invisible army conspiring to keep his name unsullied we are introduced to more of New Orleans' colorful milieu. Skip is a fragile, complex, tough woman who has the unforgiving and unheralded vocation of serving and protecting a community that oftentimes does not seem to care to be protected.

Rating: 1 stars
Summary: Dreadful. Julie Smith Doesn't Miss a Cliche in this One
Review: Smith's cardboard characters include a perky gay man (ooh, he cooks, how original), foul mouthed alcoholic mom and her thoroughly dislikeable teenage daughter, raving psychopath bad guy (honestly, could she make it a little clearer that he's evil?), and chronically depressed main character, Skip Langdon. Okay, Skip, here's some advice -- lose 20 pounds and take a vacation.

I found few redeeming features in this poorly written, badly plotted exercise in tedium.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Steamy New Orleans and vivid characters
Review: Struggling with depression over a shooting from her last case, New Orleans police detective Skip Langdon is forced to take a leave of absence, freeing her to pursue her obsession with mayoral candidate Errol Jacomine in Edgar Award-winner Smith's sixth in the series.

Jacomine, a liberal, civic-minded preacher in almost everybody's book, strikes Langdon as a dangerous psychopath. When her initial probes spur a relentless telephone campaign against her, complete with innuendo, slander and heated defenses of Jacomine, even Langdon is taken aback. But not deterred.

Smith's narrative weaves among the viewpoints of various characters, giving the reader an inside view of Jacomine's headquarters, civic projects and a converging subplot involving a doomed romance between an unhappy teenager and Jacomine's new press secretary.

As Langdon exposes Jacomine's past, the press secretary's misgivings about his boss and his illicit love collide. The climax rushes toward murder and kidnapping, culminating in a harrowing chase through bayou country in the midst of a hurricane.

Smith delves deeply into the hearts and psyches of her characters, letting their human motivations drive the plot. Her New Orleans is, as always, a vividly evoked cauldron of beauty, political corruption, cultural richness and steamy heat. Her plot hums with tension but it's Smith's seamlessly perceptive writing that sets this novel apart from the crowd.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Gripping and engrossing
Review: This is less a whodunit than a thriller, since it's clear from the start who the Bad Guy is. But that doesn't make it any less entertaining.

It's true, as another reveiwer says, that Skip is less confident in this novel. But to me, this adds rather than detracts. Skip's uncertainty, false starts, and growing fear are realistic, and her sense of doubting her own reality increases the tension in the novel.

As often happens when reading series novels, the side plots and secondary characters often are more interesting than the primary puzzle. Smith's teenagers are particularly good -- she seems to me to be that rare adult who hasn't been struck with nostalgic amnesia about the pain of being a 15-year-old girl.

Beware, the ending does not "sew up" all the loose ends, so you'll have to be ready to move on to the next one in a hurry!


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