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I shall not want by Julia Spencer-Fleming
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I shall not want (original 2008; edition 2008)

by Julia Spencer-Fleming (Author), Suzanne Toren (Narrator)

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6843433,556 (4.21)88
Fiction. Mystery. HTML:

In the searing conclusion to All Mortal Flesh, Russ's balance between duty and desire was broken by his wife's tragic death. Now, Russ and Episcopal priest Clare Fergusson are separated by a wall of guilt and grief. When a Mexican farmhand stumbles over a Latino man killed with a single shot to the back of his head, Clare is drawn into the investigation. The discovery of two more bodies ignites fears that a serial killer is loose in the rural town and Russ is plagued by the media hysteria, conflict within the police department, and a series of baffling assaults. Throughout the escalating tensions, he and Clare find themselves seeking each other out even as they intend to keep distant.

.… (more)
Member:countrylife
Title:I shall not want
Authors:Julia Spencer-Fleming (Author)
Other authors:Suzanne Toren (Narrator)
Info:North Kingstown : BBC Audiobooks America, 2008.
Collections:Read but unowned
Rating:***1/2
Tags:Read, Read 2017, {cover-member, audio-3.5 stars, from:library-overdrive, P.US - New York, Adirondacks, T.contemporary, ((( FICTION ))), . mystery, illegal immigrants, racism, migrant workers, crime fiction

Work Information

I Shall Not Want by Julia Spencer-Fleming (2008)

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» See also 88 mentions

Showing 1-5 of 33 (next | show all)
Clare Fergusson/Russ Van Alstyne 6
  SueJBeard | Jan 8, 2023 |
The latest in the series of Clare Fergusson/Russ Van Alstyne's police procedural/romantic entanglement/suspense novels. They keep getting better---not a stale word in any of them. Lots of action and excitement. If you're reading the series, you know what I mean, and I can't tell you one thing about this one that won't be some kind of spoiler, except that a new character is introduced who I really like...a young female member of the Millers' Kill PD. Oh, and that when you get to the end of this one, you'll be dying for the next one to come out.
2009 ( )
  laytonwoman3rd | Feb 23, 2022 |
In the 6th of this series by Julia Spencer-Fleming the main characters continue their infatuation and flirtation. Is it romantic or just a distraction? So many bad things happen in this small upstate New York town of Millers Kill. But the books are enjoyable and I do like Churchy mysteries. ( )
  MMc009 | Jan 30, 2022 |

For me, this series has become the place that I go when I need something to read that I know I will enjoy from the first page.


I think Julia Spencer-Fleming has achieved something remarkable with these books. It's rare to find a writer who can produce strong characters AND a strong sense of place AND a good plot AND make each book in the series better than the last.


There are books that I enjoy because they're clever or well-written or innovative or they make me think.


Then there are books like this one, that I breathe in like mountain air in the morning. That I lose myself in completely. Where the people matter to me and the story holds me. Where my wife will ask why I'm smiling as I read and where I try not to cry in public. These are the books that sing the song of my heart.


'I Shall Not Want' starts with an action scene. Not the kind where a kickass hero struts his stuff but the kind where the good guy is filled with fear and asking whether $12 hour plus benefits is a good enough reason to get shot at when she has kids at home who depend on her. The action is intense. The outcome is potentially tragic.


And that's just the prologue.


Going from a standing start to complete absorption in a few pages is one of the things that Julia Spencer-Fleming is good at. She also knows how to keep the series fresh. The character under fire in the opening scene is a woman police officer I don't know yet I'm immediately in her head and at the same time wondering what her back story is. The officer's story showed me how the characters I've grown to know over the previous five books would look to an outsider. Linking the officer both to the Police Chief who hires her and to the Priest whose church employs the officer's grandfather as a sextant, provides a link between the worlds of the two main characters even when, for much of the book, they're not willing to talk to one another.


Another way that Julia Spencer-Fleming keeps the series fresh is by pulling in contemporary topics that affect life in rural New York. This time the story pivots around the use of foreign, sometimes undocumented migrant labour on the farms, the relationship between a wealthy-three-generations-ago-but-now-bordering-on-white-trash family and the drugs trade and a tragedy that starts with a well-intentioned lie about identity.


Yet the main pull of the series remains the relationship between Claire, the Episcopalian priest who has now also re-upped into the National Guard as the helicopter pilot she was before her vocation called her and Russ, the recently violently-widowed, deeply guilt-ridden Chief of Police. This could so easily be one of those cosy-but-clichéd relationships that some romance series are built on, but it isn't. Julia Spencer-Fleming has built two very strong-willed characters, tightly bound by their personal ethical codes, granted them a sometimes overwhelming level of mutual attraction and respect and then has done terrible things to them and the people around them that make it impossible for them simply to be together. And she's done it in a way that doesn't feel forced or TV-Soap-contrived but which is a product of who these two people are and the environment that they're living in.


I like that Claire and Russ aren't the only strong characters in this book. The people around them feel real and large parts of the book are spent on their challenges and hopes.


So, six books in and this series continues to delight and even manages to surprise me. What more could I ask?


Well… book seven of course.
( )
  MikeFinnFiction | Sep 6, 2020 |
While the writing is still good, she used my LEAST favorite plot device. Describe a scene, and then when you turn the page, we've gone back in time and the thing we just read about hasn't happened yet. Grrr. I hate it in TV shows too. It colors my enjoyment of the book with an overtone of sheer annoyance. I'm not someone who usually reads ahead in the book; and to force me to, makes me very very cross.



( )
  mirihawk | May 21, 2020 |
Showing 1-5 of 33 (next | show all)
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» Add other authors

Author nameRoleType of authorWork?Status
Spencer-Fleming, Juliaprimary authorall editionsconfirmed
Czwikla, FraukeÜbersetzersecondary authorsome editionsconfirmed
Toren, SuzanneNarratorsecondary authorsome editionsconfirmed

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Epigraph
My Shepherd will supply my need,
Jehovah is his Name;
In pastures fresh he makes me feed
Beside the living stream.
He brings my wandering spirit back
When I forsake his ways,
And leads me, for his mercy's sake,
In paths of truth and grace.

When I walk through the shades of death,
Thy presence is my stay;
One word of thy supporting breath
Drives all my fears away.
Thy hand, in sight of all my foes,
Doth still my table spread;
My cup with blessings overflows,
Thy oil anoints my head.

The sure provision of my God
Attend me all my days;
Oh, may thy house be mine abode
And all my work be praise.
There would I find a settled rest,
While others go and come;
No more a stranger or a guest,
But like a child at home.

--Isaac Watts (1674-1748) paraphrase of Psalm 23,
The Hymnal, 1982, The Church Pension Fund
Dedication
To the librarians and libraries who have taught me, shaped me, befriended me, and recommended me, including: (there follows a long list of libraries)
First words
When she saw the glint of the revolver barrel through the broken glass in the window, Hadley Knox thought, I'm going to die for sixteen bucks an hour.
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Fiction. Mystery. HTML:

In the searing conclusion to All Mortal Flesh, Russ's balance between duty and desire was broken by his wife's tragic death. Now, Russ and Episcopal priest Clare Fergusson are separated by a wall of guilt and grief. When a Mexican farmhand stumbles over a Latino man killed with a single shot to the back of his head, Clare is drawn into the investigation. The discovery of two more bodies ignites fears that a serial killer is loose in the rural town and Russ is plagued by the media hysteria, conflict within the police department, and a series of baffling assaults. Throughout the escalating tensions, he and Clare find themselves seeking each other out even as they intend to keep distant.

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