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The Second Mouse

(Book #17 in the Joe Gunther Series)

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Format: Hardcover

Condition: Very Good

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Book Overview

Intriguing plots, complex characters, and a landscape come to life are mainstays of Archer Mayor's New England thrillers. With a gift for vivid writing, he has made an honorable art form of the... This description may be from another edition of this product.

Customer Reviews

5 ratings

Good Solid Mystery

Second Mouse is a good solid mystery and an enjoyable read. It doesn't have dark hard boiled violence, but has enough danger to create suspense. The characters are well drawn, the story is excellent, and the writing is crisp.

An uptick in an already good series

Archer Mayor's Joe Gunther mysteries are always well written, and full of interesting (and realistic, as far as I can tell from occasional ventures to Vermont) local color. I'm giving this a full 5 *'s because two traits that had bothered me somewhat throughout the series are abated: First, Joe is in at least temporary remission from his self-obsessed, on-again-off-again long time significant other Gail. (Why can't New England mystery guy's find girlfriends that don't make your teeth crawl -- think Spencer's Sarah Silverman, and Roxanne in Gerry Boyle's Jack McMorrow series.) Second, unlike so many of Mayor's books, the action and mysteries don't revolve around bad guys from out of state or country. The book has two threads of crime. First, Joe (who works for Vermont's fictional major crimes outfit, the Vermont Bureau of Investigation), drops in on what seems at first to be the "natural" death of Michelle Fisher, a corpse seemingly at peace and leaving no clues other than a missing cat. There is an obvious suspect, her dead husband's father who wants her out of the house he owns, but no obvious cause of death. Second, we follow the career of three smalltime South Vermont lowlifes, the hapless Ellis and Nancy and Nancy's brutal and dominating husband Mel, as Mel's penchant for violence escalates. Joe also goes to bat for longtime colleague, chief medical examiner Beverly Hillstrom, who is threatened with blackmail and political revenge, and they even advance to first name basis (astonishing as that may seem to long term readers of the series). Mayor expertly tugs at our heartstrings as we follow multiple threads of love/relationship, as well as our whodunnit logic as we try to anticipate what's going to happen with Mel's posse and to figure out what happened to Michelle. The resolutions of both threads, as well as Joe's resolution of Beverly's problems, are satisfying and surprising. Altogether the best read in the series for some time.

Archer Mayor does it again !!!!

I have read and have all 17 books in this series and have yet to be disappointed . Joe Gunther has become an old friend and it will be a long year till the next book comes out. This book has some interesting twists and turns to all the charactors final collision that, without some fate would have never happened. Great story plot and always great charactors. Only problem with this book is the same I have with all of Joe Gunthers adventures... once I start reading them I can't put them down !!!! THANK YOU AGAIN ARCHER MAYOR !!!

Solid Tale of Investigation

Vermont Bureau of Investigation Special Agent Joe Gunther arrives at home of Michelle Fisher, who's just been found dead by the local police. Although nothing seems out of the ordinary, Joe isn't satisfied with the cursory investigation doled out to the woman. Especially not since her father-in-law had sent threatening letters through his lawyer to evict Michelle from the home. The crime business is slow at the moment, and Joe is a guy who will always kick the tires of something before he buys it. Right now he's not buying Michelle's murder. At the same time, Mel Martin is a bad guy looking to go big. Together with his wife, Nancy, and accomplice Ellis Robbinson, Mel breaks into a National Guard armory and starts gathering the tools and the information to bring down his biggest score ever. Archer Mayor has written 16 previous Joe Gunther books, gathering more praise from reviewers and critics for his tenacious investigator and the rural area that he paints so well in spare, compact prose. He also works as a death investigator for the state's medical examiner and volunteers as a fireman/EMT, experiences that doubtlessly give him plenty to write about in his mysteries. Accompanying Joe throughout the investigation, I felt like I was standing in his shoes several times. Mayor brings the Vermont world to vivid life. Growing up in small towns myself, I instantly knew the mentality of the towns and the people Joe had to deal with. Mayor's prose propels the reader through the book. In addition to the seemingly innocuous death, Joe is dealing with the recent break-up of a 20-year relationship. He also has to take time out to help settle an old score for his friend, Beverly Hillstrom, the medical examiner he regularly does business with. The novel proceeds at a brisk pace, intertwining the stories of Joe's investigation and various quests with those of Mel Martin, whose wife and accomplice have suddenly started having an affair. The situation is totally volatile, and the plot gets more and more twisted in a deceptively simple way. Mayor writes mysteries the way they ought to be written: a mix of clues, suspects, investigatory techniques, and luck. Joe Gunther has already had a long run, but chances are he's going to be around for a long time to come.

Good story with outstanding character development!

Archer Mayor's Second Mouse starts not with a bang, but a whimper. But in this case, that's a good thing. When a local woman is found dead in her home, a converted Vermont schoolhouse, the local authorities aren't even sure a crime has been committed. Called in because he's recently split with his longtime girlfriend--and one of the local cops wants to play matchmaker with the victim's best friend--Joe Gunther doesn't hit it off the with the friend, but the case intrigues him. Though there are no signs of foul play, Gunther can't help but feel that there's something not right about this death, no matter how natural the causes might seem. Alongside the story of the mysterious death, Mayor also takes the reader into the sometimes bleak, often disturbing world of a trio of misfits whose story is gradually revealed to have more impact on what took place in that converted schoolhouse than first meets the eye. With endearing and refreshingly unusual secondary characters and a satisfying level of complexity, this finely crafted character study is a thoughtful and meticulously plotted look into the sometimes conflicting roles that friendship can play in the lives of both those who enforce the law, and those who break it. There is a quiet melancholy to Mayor's prose that is at once hopeful and tragic. One feels the futility of these interwoven lives he portrays, but underlying the bleakness, there is comfort in knowing that good can survive even when faced with evil. In the tradition of the best British police procedurals by John Harvey and Peter Robinson, Mayor's characters are not always right, and certainly not always likeable, but they are never dull. Joe Gunther is the rare police procedural hero who doesn't dominate the story, though with a quiet efficiency it is Gunther who keeps the story on track and who ultimately is the one who links all the divergent threads of the story together leading the reader toward the inevitable crescendo of a conclusion. Armchair Interview says: Good story with outstanding character development.
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