Showing posts with label Kinsey Milhone. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Kinsey Milhone. Show all posts

Tuesday, November 18, 2025

D is for Deadbeat (Kinsey Millhone #4) 3Stars

 

This review is written with a GPL 4.0 license and the rights contained therein shall supersede all TOS by any and all websites in regards to copying and sharing without proper authorization and permissions. Crossposted at WordPress & Blogspot by Bookstooge’s Exalted Permission

Title: D is for Deadbeat
Series: Kinsey Millhone #4
Author: Sue Grafton
Rating: 3 of 5 Stars
Genre: Mystery
Pages: 209
Words: 72K
Publish: 1987



Ahhhh, Kinsey is just a stupid woman. Call me sexist, but while I can understand a man being stupid (because I usually understand the WHY of why he’s being stupid), I simply do not understand some, errrr, most of the things Kinsey does, I just don’t. What she reacts to, and how she reacts to those things, completely mystifies me. And not in an inscrutable way, but in a head scratching “WUUUUUT?!?” kind of way.

Which leads to you asking “But Master Bookstooge, WHY did you give this 3stars then?” That is very astute of you, oh useless student who I’ve taken pity on. Maybe once you’ve worked like a death slave for me for another four years you’ll understand the Mysterious Ways of Master Bookstooge.

Needless to say, I think I’m fast approaching Maximum Nopeage for this series. But today is not that day!

★★★☆☆


From Fandom

Kinsey Millhone receives a contract from ex-con Alvin Limardo to deliver a cashier's check for twenty-five thousand dollars to a fifteen-year-old boy named Tony Gahan. According to Limardo, Tony helped him through a tough time in his life, leaving Limardo indebted. However, when the retainer check Limardo made out to Kinsey for four hundred dollars bounces, she learns that Alvin Limardo is actually John Daggett, a man known by all and liked by few, and recently released from a local prison. He is also a bigamist. His first wife Essie's fanatical religious views have kept her married to Daggett, while Daggett, in disregard of his marital status, underwent a second marriage to Lovella on his release from prison, whom he has subjected to domestic abuse.

In her search to find Daggett and get her money back, she discovers that he was found dead on the beach only a few days after hiring her. Through Daggett's daughter Barbara, Kinsey learns that Tony Gahan was the sole survivor of a family killed in a car accident caused by Daggett, for which he received a conviction on charges of vehicular manslaughter. Tony's been a wreck since the death of his family, rarely sleeping and doing poorly in school. He now lives with his uncle and aunt, Ramona and Ferrin Westfall. Also killed in the accident was a friend of Tony's young sister, and a boy called Doug Polokowski, who had hitched a ride in the car. Kinsey tracks down an ex-con friend of Daggett's, Billy Polo, now living in a trailer park with his sister, Coral. Billy introduced Lovella to Daggett. Kinsey finds out that Doug Polokowski was Billy and Coral's brother. There's no shortage of people with a motive for Daggett's death, but the police are classifying it as an accident.

Kinsey discovers that shortly before his death Daggett was staggering about drunk at the marina in the company of a blonde woman in a green outfit. She sets out to discover which of the numerous blonde women in the case might be the killer. She also suspects that Billy Polo is not giving her the full truth about his involvement with Daggett, a suspicion confirmed when Coral finally levels with Kinsey and reveals him to be blackmailing someone he suspects of Daggett's killing. The blackmailer murders Polo at the beach, using Kinsey's own gun, stolen from her car a few days earlier. Coral also admits to scheming with Billy and Lovella to rob Daggett of money he had come by illicitly in prison, not knowing that Daggett had given the money to Kinsey to pass on to Tony.

The police investigating Billy's murder discover a home-made silencer used in the killing. Kinsey immediately recognises the towelling used as padding as coming from the Westfall household, and Ramona jumps to the top of her suspect list. This means confronting Tony, who has given Ramona an alibi for the time of Daggett's death. In pursuing Tony, Kinsey realises Tony himself, dressed as a woman in his aunt's wig, was actually the killer. He was also the one who stole her gun, and killed Billy Polo, who had recognized Tony at Daggett's funeral. Killing the man who killed his family has done nothing to ease Tony's torment, however, and he commits suicide by throwing himself off a building in front of Kinsey, despite her best effort to talk him down.


Tuesday, April 15, 2025

C is for Corpse (Kinsey Millhone #3) 3Stars

 

This review is written with a GPL 4.0 license and the rights contained therein shall supersede all TOS by any and all websites in regards to copying and sharing without proper authorization and permissions. Crossposted at WordPress & Blogspot by Bookstooge’s Exalted Permission

Title: C is for Corpse
Series: Kinsey Millhone #3
Author: Sue Grafton
Rating: 3 of 5 Stars
Genre: Mystery
Pages: 223
Words: 77K
Publish: 1986



Overall, I enjoyed this a good bit more than the previous two books. Kinsey didn’t do so many stupid things. It also helped that she kept her panties on instead of jumping into bed with a murderer or nutcase or thief or spy.

But.

Once again, the author’s bias against guns shows itself and this is used to create a life and death situation for Kinsey (again!!!) that she barely escapes. I was so pissed off. If Kinsey had brought her pistol with her, she wouldn’t have had to run away from the psycho killer with a syringe of something nasty. The pistol wasn’t even mentioned this time. It’s a non-starter. Guns exist for just such a situation like this. I just shook my head and rolled my eyes.

Other than that, I definitely had a better time. A good murder mystery coupled with some of the worst of humanity. But it wasn’t presented as good or right. Gives me hope for the future of this series.

Of course, I’m alternating this series with the Mrs Pollifax series on my Era. So I won’t be back to put up with Kinsey Millhone for at least three months or more. I’m ok with that. She goes a long way, sigh...

★★★☆☆


From Wikipedia

The novel begins with Kinsey at the gym, rehabilitating herself from injuries sustained at the end of B is for Burglar. While there, she meets Bobby Callahan, a twenty-three-year-old who was nearly killed when his car went off the road nine months ago. Bobby is convinced that the car crash, which killed his friend Rick, was an attempt on his life. He suspects that he may still be in danger, so he hires Kinsey to investigate. Having lost some of his memories and cognitive faculties as a result of the crash, he can only vaguely articulate why he thinks someone wants to kill him, referring to some information in a red address book that he can no longer locate.

Kinsey takes the case despite little information, having taken a liking to Bobby. She meets his rich but dysfunctional family: Glen, his mother is an heiress who is married to her third husband, Derek Wenner, whose daughter Kitty is a 17-year-old drug user and is seriously ill with anorexia. Glen has spared no expense in seeking treatment and counseling for Bobby. He is depressed further due to Rick's death, his own injuries, and the loss of his prospects at medical school. A few days later, Bobby dies in another car crash, which is attributed to a seizure while driving. Kinsey thinks this is the delayed result of the first crash and thus a successful murder. Kinsey investigates several people: Kitty stands to inherit 2 million dollars from Bobby's will; Derek insured Bobby's life for a large sum without Glen's knowledge; and Rick's parents blame Bobby for their son's death.

However, Kinsey looks elsewhere for the solution: a friend of Bobby's gives her Bobby's address book, which shows Bobby was searching for someone called Blackman. Bobby's former girlfriend thought Bobby ended their relationship because he was having an affair with someone else, and she thinks Bobby was helping a woman who was being blackmailed. Kinsey eventually finds out that the woman with whom Bobby was involved was his mother's friend, Nola Fraker. She confesses to having accidentally shot her husband, a well-known architect named Dwight Costigan, during a supposed struggle with an intruder at their home years prior. She has a blackmailer, who is in possession of the gun with Nola's fingerprints on it.

Trying to investigate further, Kinsey realizes that 'Blackman' is code for an unidentified corpse in the morgue. She finds the gun concealed in the corpse. However, while she is at the hospital, she finds the recently murdered body of the morgue assistant and realizes the killer is at the hospital. It is Nola's current husband, Dr. Fraker, a pathologist from the hospital, who is also the blackmailer. Bobby found out what Fraker was up to; but Fraker rigged the first car accident before he could do anything about it, leading Bobby to eventually put Kinsey on the trail. Soon after, Fraker cut Bobby's brake lines, leading to his fatal crash, and falsified the autopsy results to point to a seizure. Fraker traps Kinsey and gives her a disabling injection, but she manages to cosh him and escapes to a phone to call the police. In the epilogue, she describes finally discharging the debt she feels she owes to Bobby and concludes with a wish that he is at peace.

In a side plot, Kinsey's landlord and friend Henry begins a personal and business relationship with Lila Sams, newly arrived in Santa Teresa. Kinsey, rubbed the wrong way by Lila, discovers her to be a fraudster with multiple identities and turns her over to the police just as Lila is preparing to decamp with Henry's money.


Monday, February 24, 2025

B is for Burglar (Kinsey Millhone #2) 3Stars

 

This review is written with a GPL 4.0 license and the rights contained therein shall supersede all TOS by any and all websites in regards to copying and sharing without proper authorization and permissions. Crossposted at WordPress & Blogspot by Bookstooge’s Exalted Permission

Title: B is for Burglar
Series: Kinsey Millhone #2
Author: Sue Grafton
Rating: 3 of 5 Stars
Genre: Mystery
Pages: 230
Words: 81K



I enjoyed this a good bit more than A is for Alibi. Most of that comes down to Kinsey not being the unlikeable jackass she was in A. I also came to the realization that I had spelled her last name wrong the entire review of that book. I had written “Milhone” while it is supposed be “Millhone”. That extra L is a killer.

This takes place two weeks later and sees Kinsey gallivanting from California to Florida in the quest to find a missing woman, the sister of Kinsey’s client (notice how I am calling her Kinsey? No more of that Millhone balogna). Things get complicated and it ends up being a murder.

The reason this doesn’t get an extra half star bump is because Kinsey acts like a total fool at the end. Instead of going to the police, she goes to an abandoned house to “prove” the murder, doesn’t take her gun AND runs into the murderous couple, which she KNEW was a distinct possibility. She does everything wrong and is only saved by pure luck. What an idiot.

I have this feeling I am going to be saying that a lot throughout this series :-(

The non-idiot parts were well done and carried me through. I hope that happens a lot in this series too :-)

★★★☆☆


From Wikipedia

Private investigator Kinsey Millhone is hired by Beverly Danziger to locate her missing sister, Elaine Boldt, whose name is needed on some paperwork regarding an inheritance. Elaine was last seen getting into a cab with the intention of flying down to Boca Raton, Florida, where she spends her winters, but appears to have disappeared along the way. It seems a relatively straightforward matter, so much so that Millhone is not sure Beverly needs a PI; but she agrees to take the case.

Things are not as easy as they seem, however, as Millhone can find no trace of Elaine anywhere in Florida, although she does find a woman called Pat Usher, who claims Elaine agreed to let her sublet the Boca Raton apartment where Elaine lived while she was off travelling. This claim rings false, since no one but Pat Usher has received a postcard from Elaine on her supposed trip. Millhone secures the able assistance of Elaine's elderly neighbour, Julia, to keep an eye on things in Florida while she goes back to California.

Millhone suspects there is a link between Elaine's disappearance and the death of her Santa Teresa neighbor, Marty Grice, who was apparently killed by a burglar who then set fire to the Grice home a week before Elaine left. Someone breaks into the home of Tillie, the supervisor of Elaine's Santa Teresa apartment complex, apparently on the track of some of Elaine's bills that Tillie was holding ready to forward to her. Someone also searches the detective's apartment, and Millhone realizes the thief is after Elaine's passport.

Gravely concerned for Elaine's safety, Millhone suggests to Beverly that Elaine's disappearance should be reported to the police; but Beverly objects so violently that Millhone terminates their relationship and starts working for Julia instead. Kinsey reports the disappearance and meets Jonah Robb, a recently separated cop working on missing persons. A visit from Beverly's husband Aubrey complicates matters further, as it turns out he was having an affair with Elaine, which Beverly had discovered. This raises suspicion around whether Beverly could have had a hand in Elaine's disappearance.

Millhone is increasingly convinced that Elaine is dead and that Pat Usher is involved. Pat disappears after vandalizing the Boca Raton apartment. Millhone discovers that Pat Usher has applied for a driver's license in Elaine's name, thus proving Pat's involvement.

Marty's nephew Mike, a teenage drug dealer, confesses that he was at the Grice home the night of the murder. From the discrepancy in times between his account and what was told to the police, Millhone realizes that it was Elaine who died in the Grice fire, not Marty. Marty and her husband killed Elaine to steal her identity and her money. They then passed Elaine's dead body off as Marty's by switching the dental records. Marty departed for Florida as Elaine and arrived as Pat Usher, with some cosmetic surgery to help. Unable to find Elaine's passport, she and her husband were forced to wait for a new one to come through before they can skip the country. Kinsey returns to the Grice home to look for the murder weapon; but the Grices find her. Marty Grice is shot in the left arm during the fight that ensues, but Kinsey manages to detain the two criminals and call for help.


Monday, January 13, 2025

A is for Alibi (Kinsey Milhone #1) 3Stars

 

This review is written with a GPL 4.0 license and the rights contained therein shall supersede all TOS by any and all websites in regards to copying and sharing without proper authorization and permissions. Crossposted at WordPress & Blogspot by Bookstooge’s Exalted Permission

Title: A is for Alibi
Series: Kinsey Milhone #1
Author: Sue Grafton
Rating: 3 of 5 Stars
Genre: Mystery
Pages: 224
Words: 77K



Hmmm, what to say about this? It wasn’t terrible, I didn’t hate it, but at the same time, I really didn’t care for the main character, one Kinsey Milhone. It’s not that she has a lot of hangups from her previous two marriages, or that she’s rather unlikeable as a person. It’s that she feels guilty about shooting someone to death who was trying to kill her with a knife. It was the “Emotions trump reality” aspect that bothered me. And I think what’s what bothered me about most of this. Milhone, for all her apparent toughness and smarts, does some REALLY stupid things in this story because of her feelings. I expected better of her.

She ends up sleeping with a guy and then picks fights with him so he’ll not try to get closer to her because she doesn’t want to deal with a relationship with him. As soon as she slept with him, I knew that he was either going to BE the killer she was chasing down or BE the killer’s next victim. You can read the synopsis hidden below to find out. But those were the only two options given Milhone’s character and it stank. She is an adult in her 30’s and she’s acting like she’s 18.

I enjoyed the mystery side of things quite a bit though. I am not one of those mystery fans who try to solve things before the main character does, so I’m just along for the ride. Makes reading an enjoyable activity and not a chore.

So reading this book was a real mixed bag. I enjoyed the mystery side of things but I did not care for the main character. I have the rest of Grafton’s Alphabet Mysteries on tap, so we’ll see if Milhone becomes any more likable or not.

★★★☆☆


From Wikipedia

Kinsey Millhone, a private detective, investigates the death of a prominent divorce lawyer Laurence Fife. His murder eight years earlier was blamed on his wife, Nikki Fife. Upon being released from prison, Nikki hires Kinsey to find the real murderer. In the course of the investigation, Kinsey becomes involved with Charlie Scorsoni, the late Mr. Fife's former law partner. She discovers Fife's death has been linked to that of a woman in Los Angeles, his law firm's accountant; both died after taking poisonous oleander capsules, which had been substituted for allergy pills. Kinsey tracks down the accountant's parents and former boyfriend. She then goes to Las Vegas to interview Fife's former secretary, Sharon Napier, who is killed minutes before Kinsey arrives. Back in California, Kinsey is mystified that Nikki's son, Colin, recognizes Laurence's first wife, Gwen, in a photograph. Kinsey surmises that Gwen was having an affair with her ex-husband at the time of his death. She accuses Gwen, who confesses. Shortly afterwards, she too is dead, killed in a hit-and-run crash.

Kinsey has solved the case she was hired to investigate; but in a plot twist, she discovers that her previous notions about the accountant's death were entirely wrong: in fact, it was Scorsoni who killed her when she discovered he was skimming dividend money from estate accounts under his management. Scorsoni used the same method that Gwen used to kill Fife, so it would be assumed the same person committed both murders. In a final confrontation, he chases Kinsey across the beach, armed with a knife. Kinsey hides in the shore line, and she is forced to remove her shoes and pants. Before Scorsoni can kill her, she shoots him dead.

A secondary storyline involves Millhone's surveillance of Marcia Threadgill, suspected of insurance fraud in a trip-and-fall case. Although Millhone believes she has successfully documented Threadgill's deception, the insurance firm that contracted Millhone to investigate Threadgill moves to pay her claim anyway, citing potential legal costs and complications, including the risk of reprisal.


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