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Sit, Stay, Slay

Sit, Stay, Slay

List Price: $5.99
Your Price: $5.39
Product Info Reviews

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Rating: 5 stars
Summary: clever crime thriller
Review: Kendra Ballantyne was a first rate litigator until she was accused of giving a strategy memo to opposing counsel's client. When the client got the memo, she went berserk and killed the CEO of the corporation she was suing. Although Kendra insisted she never sent that memo, she was forced to resign from the firm, her law license was suspended for three months and she filed for bankruptcy.

Darryl Nestler, her friend of Doggy Indulgence Day Resort where Kendra used to bring her Cavalier King Charles Spaniel, convinces her to dog sit for sexy Jeff Hubbard's Akita. She accepts because she is renting out her mansion and doesn't want to see others living there. Gradually, Darryl gives her more assignments taking care of the pets of the rich and famous; she is reasonably content until she walks into a client's home and finds him dead, the murder weapon next to him. The lead detective believes Kendra is a viable suspect and that conviction is strengthened when she walks in on another murdered client. Jeff, a private detective and security expert, wants to help her but she's determined to find out who is out to get her although she may get killed in the process.

SIT, STRAY, SLAY is a very funny and exciting mystery. Although Linda O. Johnston has written many novels, this is her best tale worthy of an award nomination because it entertains yet shows the audience what happens when an innocent person's life spins out of control and how that person copes with the changes forced upon her. The romance in this novel adds spice to a very clever crime thriller.

Harriet Klausner



Rating: 2 stars
Summary: OK, but not great
Review: Not the best, not the worst. I do get tired
of the beautiful heroine who just happens
to meet the handsome detective who falls
for her and just happens to provide all the
help she needs to solve the crime.

The writing on the dogs was the best part
and the author seems to really like dogs.

I think the problem here is that the book has
a checklist feel of including everything that you
expect in a cozy: the plucky heroine, dogs, trying
to start a new life, the best friend who is
a character.

I got the feeling the next book would also find
a way to have recipes in it.

Rating: 1 stars
Summary: I hated it
Review: The plot is so-so, but I didn't like the heroine and
every cliché from every amateur detective book
is here.

The author, a lawyer herself, thinks I'm going to
like someone who used bankruptcy to avoid
paying her bills and is proud of being able
to keep her movie-star style home and
expensive car despite filing for bankruptcy.

Wrong - I don't think people
should be able to screw their small business creditors.
Especially when the bankrupt is a lawyer who
made her living filing spurious lawsuits.

Then she meets a handsome private eye
who - of course - falls hard for her and
provides help in solving the crime.

What a lousy piece of work and how sad
that people overlook the amorality of
this "heroine" to praise this first novel.


Rating: 5 stars
Summary: I LOVED IT
Review: This novel was just plain fun! It showed a fiesty protagonist who didn't let adversity stand in her way of her life, but changes her life to deal with it. Also, it has dogs in it, and it is a mystery. Do you know how rare that is. This is just the type the of book that helps a reader get through the winter!

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Great Book for Animal Lovers
Review: This was a fun, light read. I'm a veterinarian and have purchased copies for several of my clients.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: A delightful addition to the genre
Review: When we meet Kendra Ballentyne, she's watching her over-the-top tenants move into her beloved Los Angeles home. A few pages later, we learn why: she's a disgraced lawyer with a suspended license, forced to resign her old firm, forced into bankruptcy by her legal fees.

Visiting her friend Darryl, operator of an upscale boarding and training kennel, Kendra soon begins a new career as an upscale pet-sitter. Through a fortuitous alliance with a private detective, she unravels the clues that led to her own misfortunes and learns who was responsible for the dead bodies that she finds along the way.

This book belongs to the new sub-genre of mysteries featuring female lawyers who were disillusioned or disgraced. Frankly, some of their career distress seems misguided. Law is one of the most flexible careers. Some law school graduates never get licensed but find satisfying careers as teachers, legal researchers, business owners, corporate executives, and a whole lot more. Still, to be fair, many lawyers are unaware of their career options and our heroine loved certain aspects of litigation that are not to be found in other lines of work.

I gave the book five stars because it accomplishes what's promised in a paperback mystery with a female heroine: high-quality fast-paced writing with likeable (though not deeply drawn) characters. The book could be a textbook for writing a mystery. When we think, "Things can't get worse," they do. When the heroine begins to relax, a body or other disaster appears to complicate her life. And there's a nice romantic subplot.

Unlike most cozy mysteries, Sit, Stay, Slay boldly incorporates a hard-nosed value system that has been criticized by other reviewers. Some readers will question the heroine's decision to declare bankruptcy, thus relieving herself of her debts. Others will be disturbed by the solution, which raises questions of right, wrong and court-appointed justice.

It is important to remember that all literature - including murder mysteries - presents some value system, such as values related to marriage and child rearing. Researchers have found that mystery readers tend to identify with upper middle to upper class values of consumption; if you don't believe me, read the way Robert Parker's hero, Spenser, describes homes, food, clothing and furniture of his clients.

I was more disturbed when the heroine allows dogs on the couch (they need to know who's pack leader) and apparently hasn't spayed her dog. Those are *my* values!

And although the author herself is a lawyer, I wondered whether a disgraced lawyer would have such open access to her former firm. I also wondered about the source of her debts. Wouldn't the firm have bought out her partnership? Would her legal bills really be stratospheric for a non-criminal proceeding? Maybe...but I'd have liked some details spelled out.

Regardless, I liked Kendra and hope we see her again. Wisely the author has opened the way toward future alliances that will be rewarding for Kendra and entertaining for us.





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