The Witch of Watergate
Publisher:
Stonehouse Press
Publication Date:
01 January, 2001
ISBN:
9781590062166
Pages:
Available as:
Trade Cloth, 978-1-59006-019-3
Trade Cloth, 978-1-55611-296-6
Trade Paper, 978-1-931304-67-2
E-Book - , 978-1-59006-216-6
E-Book - GlassBook, 978-1-931304-43-6
E-Book - Microsoft Reader: Pocket PC & Desktp/Laptop, 978-1-931304-19-1
Description:
A poison pen gets it back. When Polly Dearborn, the infamous Washington Post investigative reporter whose poison pen had destroyed many a politician's career, is found hanging from her Watergate apartment, the elite of Washington rejoice. "The Witch of Watergate" is dead! But this is no time for detective Fiona FitzGerald to celebrate. Although suicide seems logical for this lonely and miserable woman, Fiona is determined to find the truth.
PW Publishers Weekly
Review Source:
Publishers Weekly
Review Date:
1992-06-29
Copyright:
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
Adler's ( War of the Roses ) uneven mystery starts off stridently, as Washington, D.C., detective Fiona FitzGerald, here in her fifth outing, is teamed with cynical rookie Charleen Davis. The two start squabbling just as soon as they are assigned the case of a Washington Post gossip writer whose apparent suicide proves to have been murder. Fiona and Charleen spar over collecting evidence from the late columnist's computer: Charleen wins the first round by enlisting computer-illiterate Fiona's help in spiriting away the hard disks. The disks contain a damning dossier on the D.C. mayor (who happens to be touting Fiona's boss as the next police commissioner) and some damaging information about the Secretary of Defense and his son. Then Fiona and Charleen battle over their differing assessments of the suspects and take turns upstaging each other. The plot is skillfully structured, but the players and the tidy, all's-well-that-ends-well conclusion ring false. (Aug.)
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