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Rating: Summary: Not enough action Review: In Fox River, Illinois, the St. Hilary Senior Center under the auspices of Father Dowling has become quite an interesting place. The recent addition of two senior citizens, former radio star Jack Gallagher and retired college English professor Austin Rooney have joined the group. These two rivals are simply not the best of friends even though they were related through blood. They both love Jack's daughter Colleen and would do anything for her, perhaps even murder. After praying endlessly to Saint Anne for a man, Colleen is going to marry attorney Mario Liberati. However, Colleen's elation is disturbed when someone kills legal siren Aggie Rossner, who tries to seduce Mario. The police suspect Jack, but Captain Phil Keegan turns to Father Dowling to help sift through the clues. Fans of the Father Dowling series will enjoy TRIPLE PURSUIT though the tale seems even more leisurely than the usual cozy. The story line slowly simmers as readers meet all the key players in such a way that the audience comprehends what makes the individual tick. Any person, who relishes action, should pursue a different type of novel. However, those fans of the series or who just likes a gradually evolving who-done-it starring an interesting amateur sleuth will find the latest entry quite the thing. Harriet Klausner
Rating: Summary: Not enough action Review: In Fox River, Illinois, the St. Hilary Senior Center under the auspices of Father Dowling has become quite an interesting place. The recent addition of two senior citizens, former radio star Jack Gallagher and retired college English professor Austin Rooney have joined the group. These two rivals are simply not the best of friends even though they were related through blood. They both love Jack's daughter Colleen and would do anything for her, perhaps even murder. After praying endlessly to Saint Anne for a man, Colleen is going to marry attorney Mario Liberati. However, Colleen's elation is disturbed when someone kills legal siren Aggie Rossner, who tries to seduce Mario. The police suspect Jack, but Captain Phil Keegan turns to Father Dowling to help sift through the clues. Fans of the Father Dowling series will enjoy TRIPLE PURSUIT though the tale seems even more leisurely than the usual cozy. The story line slowly simmers as readers meet all the key players in such a way that the audience comprehends what makes the individual tick. Any person, who relishes action, should pursue a different type of novel. However, those fans of the series or who just likes a gradually evolving who-done-it starring an interesting amateur sleuth will find the latest entry quite the thing. Harriet Klausner
Rating: Summary: told with insight and humor Review: Ralph McInerny is one of my favorite mystery writers. A philosophy professor who has taught at Notre Dame for forty years, he is a noted scholar whose novels reflect his knowledge of the vagaries and virtues of the human heart. In "Triple Pursuit" we are again in Fox River with Father Dowling, his staunch housekeeper, Marie Murkin, and his pal Detective Phil Keegan. This is a marvelous yarn whose theme might be "cherchez la femme." Once again McInerny treats us to the interior lives of characters large and small, like the pretty young mother, Jane, who looks forward to private morning time after her husband is off to work and her children to school; or to the aging priest who continues to serve a parish despite nearly crippling arthritis. McInerny is a mature fiction writer who writes equally well of women and men, something that cannot be said for a lot of younger male writers. Kudos to him for this latest novel, and may he give us many more to enjoy!
Rating: Summary: told with insight and humor Review: Ralph McInerny is one of my favorite mystery writers. A philosophy professor who has taught at Notre Dame for forty years, he is a noted scholar whose novels reflect his knowledge of the vagaries and virtues of the human heart. In "Triple Pursuit" we are again in Fox River with Father Dowling, his staunch housekeeper, Marie Murkin, and his pal Detective Phil Keegan. This is a marvelous yarn whose theme might be "cherchez la femme." Once again McInerny treats us to the interior lives of characters large and small, like the pretty young mother, Jane, who looks forward to private morning time after her husband is off to work and her children to school; or to the aging priest who continues to serve a parish despite nearly crippling arthritis. McInerny is a mature fiction writer who writes equally well of women and men, something that cannot be said for a lot of younger male writers. Kudos to him for this latest novel, and may he give us many more to enjoy!
Rating: Summary: A welcome addition to the Dowling series. Review: TRIPLE PURSUIT is one of the better Father Dowling mysteries. Readers who are familiar with this series will feel right at home with the usual cast of regular characters and some interesting new ones. There are 3 murders involved (plus another possible one, disguised as a suicide), and several of the more sympathetic characters take turns as suspects. Father Dowling doesn't really get involved in the actual investigation until near the end, and then his involvement is rather rashly independent. A suitable culprit is finally nabbed, and everyone lives happily ever after. If this sounds rather flippant, it is very affectionately so. I really don't read the Dowling novels for the mysteries, but for the interplay among the fascinating people who inhabit the books. The warm, intelligent and conscientious Dowling himself, his nosy, officious housekeeper, his close friend detective Captain Keegan, Keegan's calm and capable assistant Cy Horvath, the rascally shyster Tuttle (who turns out to be something of a hero in this novel), and Tuttle's empty-headed cohort Peanuts Pianone, who is both an inept cop and a member of the local mob family, all play appropriate and believable parts in the plot. The additional characters for this novel add humor, love, sex, betrayal, and basic human emotions in a realistic blend of events and relationships. If you want a blood and thunder action mystery, this is not it. The violence is there, but it is downplayed, and the emphasis is consistently upon the shifting relationships among the characters. I thoroughly enjoyed reading this latest novel in an intelligent and well-written series.
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