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Abigail Timberlake Washburn would rather be anywhere else on a muggy Charleston summer evening even putting in extra hours at her antiques shop than at a séance. But her best friend, "Calamity Jane," thinks a spirit or "Apparition American," as ectoplasmically-correct Abby puts it lurks in the eighteenth-century Georgian mansion, complete with priceless, seventeenth-century Portuguese kitchen tiles, that C.J. just bought as a fixer-upper. Luckily, Abby's mama located a psychic in the yellow pages a certain Madame Woo-Woo and, together with a motley group of feisty retirees known as the "Heavenly Hustlers," they all get down to give an unwanted spook the heave-ho. But, for all her extrasensory abilities, the Madame didn't foresee that she, herself, would be forced over to the other side prematurely. Suddenly Abby fears there's more than a specter haunting C.J. And theyd better exorcise a flesh-and-blood killer fast before the recently departed Woo-Woo gets company.
Drenched in Southern charm, this hilarious new installment in Myers's Den of Antiquity mystery series (after Splendor in the Grass) finds pint-sized antiques dealer-cum-amateur sleuth Abigail Timberlake hot on the trail of another murderer. When Abby's best friend begins to suspect that a ghost is haunting her newly acquired mansion, she hires Madam Woo-Woo, psychic to Charleston's well-heeled antique collectors, to conduct a seance. Shortly after the seance, Madam Woo-Woo passes from the world of the living, apparently having been poisoned. At first, Abby is more interested in the cache of 17th-century Portuguese tiles that she finds plastered to a wall inside the mansion than the psychic's demise-until human remains are discovered behind the same wall. Abby's usual entourage-new hubby Greg, ex-hubby Buford, best friend C.J., the gay Rob-Bobs, and Mama, the quintessential Southern Belle-make appearances and infuse the tale with wild antics and witty banter. Fans of laugh-out-loud mystery fare and all things old and rare are sure to find this an exceptional delight. (Mar. 25) Copyright 2003 Cahners Business Information.
More Reviews and RecommendationsTamar Myers is the author of fifteen Den of Antiquity mysteries as well as seventeen Pennsylvania-Dutch mysteries featuring Magdalena Yoder. Born and raised in the Congo, she lives in North Carolina.
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April 13, 2009: I read this while traveling on the train and had nothing else to do. It is mildly entertaining but not anything worth raving about.
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January 30, 2003: The Den of Antiquity, a high end antique store in Charleston, South Carolina is owned and run by Abigail Timberlake, a woman who spends more time on homicide investigations than she does managing her business. Her co-worker and close friend C.J. persuades Abigail to attend a s?ance at her house so they can exorcise the ghost that haunts it. Abigail, with her mother and her friends arrive at Cid?s house when she spots a tape recorder under the table. The medium, Madame Woo-Woo put it there the day before as part of her scam. When the s?ance begins, the so-called medium punches the button on the tape recorder and shortly thereafter dies. The police discover that someone put poison on the tape recorder and Abigail knows it is one of the people who attended the s?ance. Placing herself in peril, she starts her own investigation; questioning everyone who was there. Tamar Myers, the author of the Magdelena Yoder series, has written a charming cozy filled with warmth and humor. The heroine, a four foot nine dynamo goes into her sleuth mode asking intelligent questions of all the suspects while trying to put all the pieces of the puzzle together. Her perseverance and intelligence makes her an ideal amateur sleuth. Harriet Klausner