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Beryllium Murder (Worldwide Library Mysteries)

Beryllium Murder (Worldwide Library Mysteries)

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Product Info Reviews

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Rating: 5 stars
Summary: This mystery is absorbing and entertaining
Review: Physicist Gloria Lamerino retired from the BUL lab of California's Berkley University and moved to Revere, Massachusetts. Since living in New England, the fifty-six year old retiree has embarked on a second career as an amateur sleuth. When she learns that a former BUL associate, the ultra cautious Gary Larkin died from an overdose of the toxic beryllium, Gloria wonders what really happened.

While pondering the Larkin case, Gloria becomes involved with the disappearance of Manuel Martinez, a teenager who wrote a research paper on beryllium. Gloria begins to make inquires and quickly learns that the father of Manuel's girlfriend worked in the same lab as Gary. When Manuel is found as an obvious homicide victim, Gloria realizes that a link exists between the two investigations, but remains unknown. Knowing the cost could be her life, the fearless physicist continues to search for the truth.

THE BERYLLIUM MURDER is an electrifying tale that combines elements from a police procedural and an amateur sleuth into a stimulating academic mystery. The maturity of the physicist adds to her overall credibility. Her use of her scientific knowledge to augment the official investigation makes Gloria seem like a paid member of the police force. The myriad of viable suspects enhances the story line so elemental, my dear Watson that readers will demand more academic mysteries from Camille Minichino.

Harriet Klausner

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Back to the preceding future
Review: There's good news and bad news in Camiile Minichino's latest installment in the burgeoning mystery solving career of Gloria Lamarino. The bad news is that Gloria is returning to California for her latest murder, a setting covered by author after author, rather than once again revisiting her "home town" of Revere, Massachusetts. (How many authors have made that a setting?) The good news is that in this novel, she displays a new skill for creating "red herrings" and an ability to keep the reader guessing "whodunnit" until the very end. The plot is her most convoluted yet -- and the resoluion very satisfying. Especially with the final "broad hints" that Minichino will again return to Revere for her next -- Boron -- murder. A good read, and I recommend it.


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