Hello. This will be the new home for over 800 book reviews that I have written between 1997 and the end of 2010. They used to be found at http://www.deadtreesreview.com/, but that site will be discontinued.

My newer reviews will be found at http://www.deadtreesreview.blogspot.com/.








Saturday, August 25, 2012

San Juan Solution

San Juan Solution, R.E. Derouin, Western Reflections Publishing, 2000

David Dean, retired Pennsylvania police detective, his new wife, Cynthia, and Fred O'Connor, his stepfather, have just opened a bed and breakfast in the town of Ouray, Colorado. While the building is still being renovated, and while David and Cynthia are away, Fred signs in their first two guests, an older man and a young woman, traveling separately.

Things get very interesting when, the next day, the man, whose name is Glick (but not really) is found in a car at the bottom of a ravine, quite dead. The woman, named Claudia, is found by the Dean's living in the woods by herself, with a story that she was almost forced into the trunk of that car.

The bed and breakfast, called Bird Song, is suddenly invaded by a very motley group of characters. Claudia's mother lived in a small Midwestern college town. She was the sort of person who would go to bed with practically anybody. An entire frat house full of guys was happy to oblige, so Claudia doesn't know who her father really is. Claude, the man who probably was her father, wrote a will making her heir to an electronics company which may be worth nothing or 100 million dollars, an amount in which Claudia is extremely uninterested. There are a couple of pompous attorneys from back east. Of course, a second will is found, with totally different instructions for the money. A conniving older woman named Veronica, with three sons who can charitably be called jerks, has found another young woman who she loudly proclaims is the real heir to the company. Add in a male gigolo, and the Dean's and O'Connor have a very confusing mystery on their hands.

At times, one needs a scorecard to keep track of everyone in this book. Derouin does a fine job throughout. It's an interesting tale, the settings are well done, and it's an excellent mystery. Well worth reading.

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