Sacred Cows by Karen E Olson

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(Hardcover)

  • Pub. Date: September 2005
  • 304pp

    Reader Rating: (3 ratings)

    Detailed Rating: "Plot" See All

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    Product Details

    • Pub. Date: September 2005
    • Publisher: Grand Central Publishing
    • Format: Hardcover, 304pp

    Synopsis

    From Karen E. Olson, a talented new voice and winner ofthe first Sara Ann freed Memorial award, comes a smart and suspensefuldebut mystery.

    Publishers Weekly

    A phone call summons New Haven, Conn., crime reporter Anne Seymour from a beer-fogged sleep to cover a breaking story at the start of Olson's spirited debut, the winner of the first Sara Ann Freed Memorial Award. The dead body of a Yale undergrad lies at the foot of a luxury high-rise condo. Anne faces the usual stonewalling by the detective-on-the-scene-which smarts a little extra as he has recently vacated her bed. Dogged by a pesky fellow reporter, Anne struggles to keep her byline to herself, while she's warned off the case by her boss, her cop boyfriend and the university higher-ups. The plot thickens when she learns that the student was a high-priced escort, as is the next young female Yalie found murdered. A slave to her hormones, the smell of garlic and her driving ambition, the spunky, imperfect Anne is an engaging protagonist. Several other well-realized characters, some bovine humor and an amiable sense of the Yale/New Haven community round out this enjoyable first. Agent, Jack Scovil. Mystery Guild Featured Alternate. (Sept.) Copyright 2005 Reed Business Information.

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    Customer Reviews

    An OK read for a rainy day.by Anonymous

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    August 23, 2009: I liked the overall story but I felt that the use of "swear" words was not necessary for the storyline. I found this word usage distracting and limited my enjoyment of the book.

    This is not a book that I would reread or add to my permanent library nor would I give it as a gift. However, I will probably donate this book to a book drive or Goodwill. Others might be able to read it (and enjoy it more) without the looking at the word usage as an obstacle.

    Loved itby Anonymous

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    April 25, 2006: Annie Seymour is a police reporter who lives in a brownstone on Wooster St., in New Haven, within sniffing distance of Sally's and Pepe's pizza parlors. She's awakened by her editor one night (after a rowdy night with her policeman lover and just a tad too much to drink). A young woman (a Yale student)has taken a dive out of a window not far from her brownstone, and Annie gets tapped to write the story. This is a terrific police procedural/cozy. Annie is burdened with a toadying coworker, an uber and really scary attorney mom, who's sleeping with Annie's publisher and who may have secrets about the girl's demise, an old flame turned PI, some truly sleazy developers, the possibility that some Yale students may have quirky ways to make tuition, and conflicts with her policeman lover. And she has to juggle the all-important town-gown relations, in which Yale is the 300-pound gorilla. And to top it off, she has to wrangle the Parade of Cows, a trail-drive of decorated fiberglass cows strung around New Haven. She follows her sources around New Haven, including a sleazy escort service owner, who keeps trying to recruit her. She asks hard questions and a doesn't give up. The ending is a bit facile I saw it coming, but there are enough red herrings and false trails to keep you guessing. I loved Annie she a first-class crank and doesn't take any guff. No Sex-in-the-City stilettoes for her. She's strictly a whatever I can fish out of the laundry hamper girl. She's down to earth, she's lovable (but cranky). I'd like her even if we didn't agree that Sallly's makes the best pizza in New Haven.


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