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Goodnight, Irene

Audiobook
0 of 1 copy available
Wait time: About 2 weeks
0 of 1 copy available
Wait time: About 2 weeks
Packed with intrigue and danger, Jan Burke's Irene Kelly mysteries thrill her many avid fans. The morning after Irene says goodnight to her old journalist friend O'Connor, he is killed suddenly upon opening a letter bomb. As the smoke clears, a devastated Irene determines to find the mail-bomber by tracing threads of an unsolved crime from 1955-the same cold case O'Connor had been obsessed with.
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    • Publisher's Weekly

      March 1, 1993
      Set in the fictional Southern California town of Las Piernas, this generally exciting debut mystery--the first of a projected series--brims with brutality, but is slowed at times by home and hospital bedside scenes. Former reporter Irene Kelly, now working in public relations, is shocked when her friend O'Connor is killed by a bomb hidden in a package. The only clue Irene can unearth is O'Connor's obsession with a long-unsolved crime involving an unidentified female body discovered in Las Piernas years before. Rehired by the Las Piernas Express , Irene teams up with ex-lover and homicide cop Frank Harriman to crack the case, but details of what O'Connor had learned about the killing are long in coming. Burke punctuates her too leisurely exposition with graphic, effective scenes of murder and attempted murder, although she depicts the menacing assassins more as machines than as human beings and provides a plausible explanation for all the violence only at her story's very end. Still, she writes with remarkable sensitivity about the physical and spiritual reactions of people terrorized by cold-blooded killers, and her gift for characterization somewhat compensates for her still-rudimentary pacing skills.

    • AudioFile Magazine
      Jan Burke's Irene Kelly mysteries continue as the Southern California reporter finds herself investigating the death of a friend who was a journalist. Soon she falls into the same trap that had him obsessed since 1955--an unsolved murder involving an unidentified female body. While the story is exciting and original, the narration leaves much to be desired. Eliza Foss reads with such a forced tone that it makes it hard to take this story seriously. Delving too far into character, Foss comes off sounding strained and monotonous, at times even robotic. As a result, the story has no tension or mystery--no intrigue or suspense. It's a testament to how overacting can ruin a good story. L.B. (c) AudioFile 2008, Portland, Maine

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  • English

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