From Publishers Weekly
Burying Ariel: A Joanne Kilbourn Mystery, by Canadian author Gail Bowen (A Killing Spring), enmeshes the series star in an unofficial investigation of the murder of a female university colleague. Grief, feminist retribution for male violence, the self-incriminating words of the victim's boyfriend and competing theories and theorists on the case all conspire, however unsuccessfully, to lead stoic Joanne astray.
Copyright 2001 Cahners Business Information, Inc.
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Praise for the Joanne Kilbourn Series:
Deadly Appearances“Gail Bowen has written a compelling novel infused with a subtext that’s both inventive and diabolical. Her future as a crime writer is no mystery.”
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Montreal GazetteMurder at the Mendel“A third of the novel is a tense, masterfully written character study; then the killings begin…Bold and powerful.”
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Publishers WeeklyThe Wandering Soul Murders“Bowen’s best book to date.…She pulls her complicated story together around a shocking and all-too-realistic secret”
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Globe and MailA Colder Kind of Death“A delightful blend of vicious murder, domestic interactions, and political infighting that is guaranteed to entertain.”
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Quill & QuireA Killing Spring“A page-turner. More than a good mystery novel, it is a good novel, driving the reader deeper into a character who grows more interesting and alive with each book.”
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LOOKwestVerdict in Blood“Once again, Canada’s sleuth scores with readers. Bowen reaches out to grab her audience with her first sentence of this page-turner and she doesn’t let go until her satisfying conclusion.”
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Canadian Press