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Blood Tracks (American Historical Mysteries)

Blood Tracks (American Historical Mysteries)

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Product Info Reviews

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Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Recommended
Review: Although it was wonderful visiting with Helen and Milo again this book was more difficult to follow than the first, Steel Ashes. The plot is more convoluted and the tone is much darker.

I would still recommend it for those who read the first book.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Highly recommended
Review: The second in the series of Pittsburgh at the turn of the century, this one keeps up the pace of its first book. Though Helen is much angrier in this book than in the first, it's not too distracting. All the other fine qualites, the mood and historical detail and romantic touch continues here nicely. An interesting book to read.

Rating: 3 stars
Summary: Not as Good as First - But Still Good
Review: This is the second in Cercone's series featuring Detective Milo Kachigan, settlement house director Helen Sorby, and 1905 Pittsburgh. In this outing, an aging anarchist tests out one of his bombs in the settlement house's back yard. What appears when the smoke settles is a dead body. However, it is clear to Helen that the man was not killed in the bomb blast. She also knows that the police will take the easiest way out and arrest her anarchist-boarder for the death. To ensure that the murder is investigated by the only honest policeman she knows, she gets herself arrested as well. True to form, Milo gets himself assigned to the case and bails Helen out, but leaves the anarchist in jail. He makes Helen promise not to interfere with his investigation and she, surprisingly, agrees as long as he promises not to interfere with hers. They go their separate ways, each turning up important pieces of the puzzle.

In this outing, Helen and Milo seem more antagonistic than in the first. Helen has become, in many ways, shrewish. It is a disappointment because the first book showed much promise of a series with a strong woman and a strong man operating on as equal terms as the times allowed. The writing remains strong with Cercone using Pittsburgh to provide us a history of the times. She does not let her history overwhelm the story or the characters, and uses real people, like George Westinghouse, in a believable way.

Rating: 3 stars
Summary: Not as Good as First - But Still Good
Review: This is the second in Cercone's series featuring Detective Milo Kachigan, settlement house director Helen Sorby, and 1905 Pittsburgh. In this outing, an aging anarchist tests out one of his bombs in the settlement house's back yard. What appears when the smoke settles is a dead body. However, it is clear to Helen that the man was not killed in the bomb blast. She also knows that the police will take the easiest way out and arrest her anarchist-boarder for the death. To ensure that the murder is investigated by the only honest policeman she knows, she gets herself arrested as well. True to form, Milo gets himself assigned to the case and bails Helen out, but leaves the anarchist in jail. He makes Helen promise not to interfere with his investigation and she, surprisingly, agrees as long as he promises not to interfere with hers. They go their separate ways, each turning up important pieces of the puzzle.

In this outing, Helen and Milo seem more antagonistic than in the first. Helen has become, in many ways, shrewish. It is a disappointment because the first book showed much promise of a series with a strong woman and a strong man operating on as equal terms as the times allowed. The writing remains strong with Cercone using Pittsburgh to provide us a history of the times. She does not let her history overwhelm the story or the characters, and uses real people, like George Westinghouse, in a believable way.


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