Sunday, May 20, 2012

Review: Bonereapers: A Dinah Pelerin Mystery (Dinah Pelerin Mysteries) by Jeanne Matthews







  • Hardcover: 250 pages
  • Publisher: Poisoned Pen Press (June 5, 2012)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 1590586182
  • ISBN-13: 978-1590586181

Book Description

Hewed out of a frozen mountain six hundred miles from the North Pole, the Doomsday Seed Vault was designed to safeguard the earth’s precious collection of seeds from rising sea levels, hurtling asteroids, nuclear holocaust, and every other conceivable disaster. But no fortress, however remote or carefully constructed, can protect against human corruption and men who have made it their business to gain control of the world’s food supply. Dinah Pelerin had no idea when she left sunny Hawaii on an undercover fact-finding mission to the seed vault in Longyearbyen, Norway, that she would get a crash course in the politics of genetic engineering, or that she would become embroiled in the marital troubles of an American presidential candidate and his enigmatic, Norwegian-born wife. Or that a dead body would tumble out of the hotel sauna into her arms. In late December, Polar Night wraps around the little town of Longyearbyen like a lead blanket, impenetrable and endless. The temperature rarely climbs above zero and bodies don’t decompose in the permafrost. The dead have to be shipped south for burial and soon there are two murder victims headed there. Who has killed them, and why? With three U.S. senators, a powerful corporate CEO, and an Norwegian government minister as her fellow suspects, Dinah is under no illusions. She had better untangle the knot of motives and pretenses fast or suspicion will come crashing downhill like an avalanche and bury her so deep she’ll never see daylight again.

About the Author

 The author was born and raised in Georgia.  She graduated from the University of Georgia with a degree in Journalism and has worked as a copywriter, a high school English and Drama teacher, and a paralegal.  She currently lives in Renton, Washington with her husband, who is a law professor, and a West Highland terrier, who is a prima donna.

 
My Review

Have you ever heard of Longyearbyen?  I had not either.  It is always interesting to read about a place that you did not know existed.  It was interesting having Norway and the Norwegian people featured in the story.

Enjoyable murder mystery in a unique setting makes for a good read.  Constant darkness and cold are mentioned quite often but the mood is not captured in any way.  The main character Dinah is not one that you warm up to in any great hurry.  But the combination of the story involving preserving seeds in case of catastrophe combined with the setting and the mystery do combine to make an enjoyable read.

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