Murphy's Law (Molly Murphy Series #1) by Rhys Bowen

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(Hardcover - Revised)

  • Pub. Date: October 2001
  • 224pp

    Reader Rating: (17 ratings)

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    Product Details

    • Pub. Date: October 2001
    • Publisher: St. Martin's Press
    • Format: Hardcover, 224pp

    Synopsis

    From the creator of the much-loved Constable Evan Evans mysteries comes a colorful new series set in turn-of-the-century New York City. When spirited redhead Molly Murphy was growing up a peasant on the coast of Ireland she always imagined there was something more in store for her. She couldn't have known how right she was until the day she became a murderer, albeit in self-defense. Under drastic circumstances, Molly is forced to strike out into a new world. With the police right behind her, Molly's only chance at escape is a false identity and a steamship that will take her far, far away: to America.

    When her ship sails into New York Harbor, with the majestic figure of the Statue of Liberty providing comfort and inspiration, Molly is sure her whole life is in front of her. But she's got one last hurdle to clear: Ellis Island. She is just one among thousands of immigrants on the tiny island, awaiting their fate with anxiety and hope. Unfortunately for Molly, before she is able to leave the island a man is brutally murdered, his throat cut from ear to ear, and coincidence and fate make her a suspect in a crime she didn't commit. Under a cloud of suspicion, and due largely to a growing mutual attraction between Molly and the handsome police captain in charge of the case, she is allowed to leave Ellis Island for Manhattan. Unfortunately, she's got a mission she couldn't have anticipated: clear her own name of murder. Alone in a new country with no one to lean on, Molly hits the vibrant streets of New York intent on finding out what really happened. After all, if she can't, she'll be sent back to Ireland, where the dreaded gallows await.

    With the sweepingskyline of 19th century New York and the gritty, pulsating underworld of recently arrived immigrants forming a vivid backdrop, Rhys Bowen transports readers back in time to America's not-so-distant past. The first entry in the Molly Murphy series is a fascinating look at our immigrant history as well as an intensely absorbing page-turner.

    Publishers Weekly

    The prolific Bowen, creator of Welsh constable Evan Evans (Evan Can Wait; Evan and Elle; etc.), relies a bit too much on coincidence but conveys a nice sense of place and period in this debut of a new historical series with its spunky, 19th-century Irish heroine, Molly Murphy. Defending herself from the unwelcome advances of the local landowner's son, Molly accidentally kills him and flees her village to escape hanging. She heads for the anonymity of London, where a twist of fate introduces her to Kathleen O'Connor. Kathleen has two small children and tickets for a ship to America, where she plans to join her husband. But knowing they won't let her on the ship because of her tuberculosis, Kathleen persuades the desperate Molly to take her children to America. On board, Molly attracts the loud attentions of a crude, boisterous type named O'Malley. Her public argument with him comes back to haunt her when he is found murdered on Ellis Island; Molly becomes a prime suspect, along with a young man she befriended. The handsome young policeman investigating the case, Daniel Sullivan, appears to believe Molly's protestations of innocence, but Molly decides her she'd better investigate on her own behalf and that of her friend. Wending her way through a vivid, Tammany Hall-era New York, Molly struggles to prove her innocence, aided by one coincidence after another. (Oct. 15) Forecast: Bowen's solid reputation will generate strong sales for this series debut, though Constable Evans fans should beware that the gentle humor of those novels is lacking here. Copyright 2001 Cahners Business Information.

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    Biography

    Rhys Bowen, the creator of the successful Evan Evans series, lives in San Francisco.

    Customer Reviews

    Great Book!by A-Novel-A-Day---

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    August 01, 2009: I picked up this book after having read Rhys Bowen's "Her Royal Spyness." Two very different books, but each enjoyable in their own way. Murphy Brown is a down to earth heroine that we can't help but root for her as she overcomes life's circumstances and finds a better life for herself in turn of the century New York. Each of the books in the Murphy Brown series just keeps getting better and better. I could hardly put the book down. You won't be disappointed.

    The characters are stereotypical but it's a promising beginningby nprfan1

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    March 20, 2009: This is the first book in the Molly Murphy mystery series, and while the characters from Molly on down are somewhat stereotypical, and the plot twists a bit too coincidental, this is still a worthwhile story and a good beginning to what sounds like a promising series.

    Molly is your typical flame-haired Irish lass at the turn of the last century who, having accidentally killed the son of her "landlord" while fighting off his none-too-subtle advances, has fled her homeland for the wilds of early twentieth-century New York. It would take too long to explain how she managed to get there, but on the ship she meets a boorish lout who goes by the name of O'Malley. This same boorish lout winds up dead shortly after the ship docks at Ellis Island, and through circumstances too convoluted to explain here Molly becomes a suspect in his murder.

    All of the characters in this story, from police captain Daniel Sullivan to Alderman McCormack, and including Molly herself, sound like Barry Fitzgerald clones - but the story still flows logically and you worry about Molly and what kind of danger she's going to get into in the next chapter. And the ending reads exactly like a pilot for a TV series - but how else is Bowen going to explain Molly's chosen profession for the remainder of her series?

    Bear in mind that Bowen is no Agatha Christie and you'll do just fine.


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