Tuesday, February 10, 2009

Instruments of Night by Thomas H. Cook

Started: 2/6/09
Finished: 2/9/09
Year: 1998
Pages: 293
Genre: mystery
Grade: B
Reason for reading: library book
Blurb (from book jacket): "Paul Graves knows evil to the bone. He confronted it first as a boy, when he survived the torture-murder of his sister. As a man, he has made its exploration his life's work, tirelessly writing mysteries set in gaslight New York, a world of mists and shadows, of voices pleading in the fog, footsteps racing over rain-swept cobblestones...a world colored by the ache of Graves's own past, its still-rememberd screams.
"It is a far cry from Riverwood, the artists' community in upstate New York where Graves is invited to spend the summer. And yet, for all its splendor and grand isolation, Riverwood was once touched by crime-the murder of Faye Harrison, a teenage girl who'd lived on the estate fifty years before. Faye's mother is now dying, but uneasily still tormented by the unanswered questions about her daughter's death. Graves has been summoned by Allison Davies, Faye's girlhood friend and now Riverwood's owner, and asked to explore this long-past crime, apply the art of mystery fiction to a murder that was real, then write a story that will answer those very questions that keep Faye's mother from a peaceful death.
Opinion: Another decent book by Cook. Not as good as the first one that I had read. Cook has an amazing way of intertwining the past with the present. Highly recommend.

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