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Unhinged: A Home Repair Is Homicide Mystery

(Book #6 in the Home Repair Is Homicide Series)

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Format: Mass Market Paperback

Condition: Very Good

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Book Overview

Once a Wall Street hotshot, Jacobia "Jake" Tiptree chucked it all for a charmingly dilapidated fixer-upper in the tiny town of Eastport, Maine. She was certain she'd left the dangers of city life... This description may be from another edition of this product.

Customer Reviews

4 ratings

Who's behind the accidents and murder

Jessica is taking a leisurely three-day journey on a classic train, the historic Whistler Northwind, with members of the Track and Rail Club through much of British Columbia. She was invited by her friend Reggie Weems who is one of the Vice Presidents of the club. The trip begins and ends in Vancouver, one of her favorite cities. Not into the trip, Al Blevin, the club's president, goes into convulsions and dies after taking a sip of a Bloody Mary. Immediately Jessica suspects strychnine poisoning. Al's wife Theodora tells Jessica emphatically to stop talking about it being poisoning. She said he had heart failure. Royal Canadian Mounted Police Detective Marshall asks Reggie and Jessica to keep their ears and eyes open and report back to him with any information they get. Theodora's son, Benjamin, follows Jessica up Whistler Mountain and tells her to "butt out!" She has some accidents and other encounters along the way. Plus there's the mysterious disappearance of Theodora's previous husband, Elliott Vail. He disappeared on that very train three years ago. Everyone believes he jumped, but his body was never found. Jessica wonders if there is any correlation to Al's death. Al was not well liked, so there is a plethora of suspects. Plus there is plenty of trouble in his past to add to the suspect list. Can they figure out who did it and why before the end of the trip and everyone heads home and without Jessica finding herself in peril? After watching so many years of Murder, She Wrote on television, I can "see" the characters acting out the book as I read it. It is a lot of fun and so easy to read. I especially enjoyed this book with it being set on such a wonderful train trip. The scenery was wonderful. I highly recommend this book.

a fine mid-series addition

Jacobia Tiptree strikes again! I love these books -- they're like potato chips for the brain. I was sorry in this volume not to learn more about the town of Eastport, but happy to learn more about Jacobia's past. The mystery itself is interesting, and the evolution of Victor, and Sam, and Maggie's characters continues pleasingly.

riveting amateur sleuth

Jacobse "Jake" Tiptree lives on the small island of Eastport off the coast of Maine in a home that needs serious renovation otherwise it will soon crumble into nothingness. Not being a millionaire, Jake does as much of the repairs as possible but when she discovers the foundation needs replacing, she advertises for a stone mason. Lian Ash answers the advertisement and Jake hires him on the spot because his rates appear reasonable.At about the same time Jake hires Lian, the town's most despised gossip, Harriet Hollingsworth, disappears and Harry Markle, a retired NYPD detective, buys the house. Strange things begin to happen on the island like Jake's son getting hurt in a car accident because the brake hose was cut and Jake's husband being injured by a bullet made to explode. Harry thinks it is the work of the serial killer that murdered his wife and girlfriend as well as other police officer's relatives. Jake and her friend Ellie don't buy into that theory and start their own investigation, a move, which brings them and their families closer to death.UNHINGED is a riveting amateur sleuth mystery filled with enough red herrings to keep the reader totally befuddled until the author chooses to identify the killer. After reading this novel, those fans interested in buying a house will want to purchase something new so they don't have the aggravating repairs the heroine is forced to deal with, sometimes with hilarious results. Sarah Grave imbues her work with a subtle sense of humor so that the tension level of the story line never rises to an unbearable level.Harriet Klausner

Excellent entry in this series about Eastport, Maine

Unhinged is an excellent read for several reasons. First, the book provides a real flavor of Maine, and is clearly written by someone who loves Eastport. The descriptions are vivid and authentic; the author never portrays Eastport as paradise (to the contrary), but one can almost smell the docks and hear the waves crashing and the foghorns blowing. Second, the characterizations in the book are a joy to read. Sarah Graves manages to convey the characterizations as her first-person detective and heroine, Jacobia, perceives them. This gives the reader the same sense of discovery that Jake feels when she learns more about the people involved. Third, the plot was enjoyable. I figured out quite early on who was behind the nasty events in the book, particularly in light of the periodic implicit references to Occam's Razor (the simplest solution. . . .). I did not figure out why, though, so there was some suspense left. (I cannot say any more without giving too much away.) The plot, while enjoyable, was perhaps the weakest aspect of the novel; I periodically wanted to smack Jacobia who seemed to be missing the most obvious clues. But I am more than willing to forgive some weakness in the plot to get that flavor of Maine and the characters in Eastport!I am also willing to forgive the excessive use of colons. Colons should NOT be used to end paragraphs. But I ignored them in my general delight at this book.One last positive attribute: I loved the home-repair piece of this book. I live in an old house, not old by Eastport's standards, but old enough to allow me to appreciate the bottomless need for repairs that such houses generate. Sarah Graves manages to be funny and wry, at the same time conveying the general sense of despair that a house can cause in its owner, as every repair generates the need for more, and more serious, action. This book was an excellent read and I recommend it highly.
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