Tuesday, March 9, 2021

BOOK REVIEW: Don’t Dare A Dame by M. Ruth Myers

 




Don’t Dare a Dame, A Maggie Sullivan Mystery, by M. Ruth Myers is a cozy mystery featuring a 1930s female detective who is smart, brave, and very independent. This is an extremely well written series with great characters and dialogue. I love the 1930s flavor and tight, neat plot that moves along at a good pace. This was not my first Maggie Sullivan book and it won’t be my last.


2014 SHAMUS AWARD WINNER


Tea with two spinsters thrusts 1930s private investigator Maggie Sullivan into an explosive mix of murder, political rivalries and family secrets. Pursuing their case means risking not only her life, but her detective license.

The Vanhorn sisters want her to learn the fate of their father, who vanished more than a quarter century earlier in Dayton, Ohio’s, catastrophic 1913 flood. They believe he was murdered. They think they know the killer. But before Maggie can question the suspect, he winds up dead.

With a nip of gin to cheer her and a Smith & Wesson for company, Maggie follows a trail all but obliterated by time. It leads her to a local politician with bigger ambitions — and possibly secrets to hide. It takes her into dime stores, cheap hotels, and a violent ambush by men wearing brass knuckles.

A determined cop wages a wily campaign to win her affections. A rag-tag newsboy pushes to be her assistant. As crimes of the past explode in the present, Maggie fights foes who must destroy her to destroy each other.

Slide into the passenger seat of Maggie’s DeSoto for an action-packed ride through a story filled with the atmosphere of early 20th century America and well-drawn characters. See why fans of this historical mystery series have dubbed the one-of-a-kind detective at its center “Sam Spade in a Skirt”.


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