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Murder in the Rue St. Ann: A Novel (Chanse…
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Murder in the Rue St. Ann: A Novel (Chanse MacLeod Mysteries) (edition 2004)

by Greg Herren

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855314,699 (3.91)6
Chanse MacLeod, the sexy gay private eye from Greg Herren's 'Murder in the rue Dauphine' has been hired to find out who is doggedly trying to sabotage the opening of a new French Quarter nightclub. However, nothing is ever as it appears in the streets of New Orleans and MacLeod may may learn that lesson at the cost of his life. Greg Herren, whose previous mysteries also include Bourbon Street Blues, takes us back to the sultry streets of New Orleans, a city where the elegant beauty of a genteel past has decayed to reveal an often gritty present.… (more)
Member:krzykris101
Title:Murder in the Rue St. Ann: A Novel (Chanse MacLeod Mysteries)
Authors:Greg Herren
Info:Alyson Books (2004), Paperback, 240 pages
Collections:Your library, Read but unowned
Rating:****
Tags:None

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Murder in the Rue St. Ann by Greg Herren

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2nd in the Chanse MacLeod series. This one starts with a prologue of an obsessed fan watching erotic wrestling videos. Chanse's case in this one is a woman who is trying to open a bar in the Quarter. Again full of twists and turns. The man that runs the PR firm for the bar is the one who is murdered. We also learn lots about Chanse's background and that he didn't know his bf Paul as well as he thought. The mob is involved with this one and has their finger in a number of parts not revealed until the end. The wrestling is a bit of a side story but again is another thing that plays a huge part in the end. Author has a way of getting you absorbed into the lives of his characters and really caring for them in a short period of time. I think the large amount of background on Chanse in this one certainly helped with that. ( )
  ChrisWeir | Mar 18, 2018 |
Second novel with New Orleans ex-cop turned private detective Chance MacLeod. A more interesting read then the first book "Murder in the rue Dauphine". MacLeod is once again involved in a series of murders where nothing is as it seems and where he risks losing quite a lot. The mood is somewhat dark and sad. We follow Chance pursuing the clues and the hints that come very close to home. Greg Herren doesn't cheat his characters or the plot of this intriguing mystery. I liked it even if I found myself very sad at the end. If you like happy-happy-joy-joy ending this one is not for you. ( )
  writerlibrarian | Apr 6, 2013 |
The mystery has multiple levels of red herrings and I actually got a little confused in the middle, but the story of Chanse and his lover kept me going. In the end I was very satisfied and thought it quite well done. ( )
  aulsmith | Nov 5, 2012 |
Chanse MacCleod is asked to investigate who is causing problems to delay the opening of a former singer's new night club in New Orleans. The club's PR agent then turns up dead and the main suspect is Chanse's boyfriend, who then disappears.

I started reading this book because I enjoyed Chanse's social milieu, his interactions with his friends Blaine (who hardly appears in this book) and Paige and his contact on the police force, Venus, and his slowly revealed back story. We do get to hear more of the back story in this book but Chanse's social life takes much more of a back seat despite his reflections about his life with Paul, so that was a bit of a disappointment. Oh, and c'mon, an albino villain? ( )
  Robertgreaves | Aug 19, 2012 |
Rating: 4* of five

The Publisher Says: When sexy gay private eye Chanse MacLeod investigates the financial shenanigans of club promoter Mark Williams, he discovers that not only does Williams have ties to the New Orleans judiciary, he also has ties to Chanse’s lover, Paul—a connection that reveals secrets about Paul’s past that Chanse had never guessed and now wishes he didn’t know. When Paul disappears, it seems his past has caught up with him in a terrifying way.

My Review: Second of the Chanse MacLeod murder mysteries set in New Orleans, this is a more assured performance by author Herren. He winds a good tale around the sudden end of happiness for our tight-lipped hero...boyfriend Paul goes, in the space of twenty-four *really* lousy hours, from apple dumpling sweetie pie to murder suspect to missing person. Chanse reveals more to us in the course of his frantic search for Paul, and along the way steps in the dogshit-laden middle of a Federal Mob case, almost becomes a wrestle-porn whore, and winds up with a tender and loving experience of family and love and acceptance. As his entire world ends. Ain't it always the way?

*SPOILERS FROM HERE ON*
*
*
I don't know if I've told my grim secrets often enough for them to be scabbed over or not, but this book ripped them scabs right off. Chanse's trailer-trash past is detailed here, and while the setting of his agonies was way way down-market from mine and my mother was the abuser not my father, we came from similar backgrounds of unknowable trigger-points for screaming violent abuse. It was harrowing to read. (Sucked to live, too.)

Then, after a very unpleasant break-up, we see Chanse's self-involvement and inability to love and care in a real and significant way for others: Check! Did that. I hid it behind being an AIDS volunteer, and put a braver face on it for the public, but oh yeah. Ask any of the women I married. Ask the men I dated. I promise they'd back me up here: Cold as a walk-in freezer when it came down to it.

And then, and then...oh my oh my...Chanse loses Paul to a vile and horrible crime, as I lost my son to his mother's drunk driving in 1981, as I lost my dearly, dearly treasured Bland to AIDS in 1992. Herren gives his reactions to the horror in a direct and laconic way, which makes them all the more affecting. Those of us only slightly and tangentially able to feel emotions anyway respond to grief in a particular way...all the color goes out of the world. There may be a storm of weeping, then *slam* the gate goes down. No more tears. And then the torment begins: You are made of lead, of iron-bound lead, and the world is papier mache. Moving is a delicate task. Nothing at all works. Drinking and drugging suddenly seem like *wonderful* ideas, so off you go!

And that, my friends, is where Herren leaves Chanse--at a bar, drink in front of him, at 11:45am.

Oh yeah. Been there, done that, and so (I suspect) has Herren. I don't think a person can make this imaginitive leap without a real solid launching pad. I hurt for him, no one should have to know what it's like. But then, isn't that what art does? Take the fortunate to the places the unfortunate know how to find? Well, whatever the source, the book takes the reader there, that awful agonized place of loss.

But then you get to close the book, put it on a shelf, and get a glass of water for your nightstand as you go to bed.

Sweet dreams. ( )
1 vote richardderus | Jun 30, 2011 |
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This book is dedicated to Patricia Brady, a great lady and a terrific writer

And of course, to Paul
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Chanse MacLeod, the sexy gay private eye from Greg Herren's 'Murder in the rue Dauphine' has been hired to find out who is doggedly trying to sabotage the opening of a new French Quarter nightclub. However, nothing is ever as it appears in the streets of New Orleans and MacLeod may may learn that lesson at the cost of his life. Greg Herren, whose previous mysteries also include Bourbon Street Blues, takes us back to the sultry streets of New Orleans, a city where the elegant beauty of a genteel past has decayed to reveal an often gritty present.

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