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Death and the Language of Happiness by John Straley
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Death and the Language of Happiness

by John Straley

Series: Cecil Younger (4)

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I went on an Alaskan cruise and while in Sitka went into a bookstore looking for books by a local author or about the area. I found this, both by a transplant to Sitka and about a (fictitious) Private Eye working in town. This is the 4th book in the Cecil Younger series.

Cecil Younger is a private eye and recovering alcoholic whose services have been in low demand in recent months. He gets a conference call from both his lawyer and his shrink. A local, who is closing on the centurion mark and is believed to have killed a local mother in a bathtub across the street from the old folks home, wants to hire Cecil to 'kill' a man. Or so the duo claim. Cecil has his reservations about the whole thing, but since the bank is thinking about a foreclosure on his house, he decides talking to the old man can't hurt. Things get weirder from there.

Overall I would have to compare this very closely to Sue Grafton's Kinsey Milhone novels. While Cecil is not stupid, he is successful because of luck and sheer doggedness than any impressive insights. The book also does a great job of showing one a realistic look at the people and community of Sitka, Alaska. A good read. ( )
  readafew | Oct 5, 2009 |
This is the first of the Felix Younger series of mysteries and it's a wild ride. Felix is a dangerous drunk on occasion and not the usual private eye. Straley takes you into some strange new ground with this inventive mystery. ( )
  bastet | Sep 25, 2007 |
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Sitka, Alaska -- May
William Flynn had been a gardener by Alaskan standards and some people maintained he had also been a terrorist.
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(Click to show. Warning: May contain spoilers.)
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Amazon.com (ISBN 0553572504, Mass Market Paperback)

What makes this latest Alaskan mystery a must is--as always--the sheer beauty and energy of John Straley's writing. "His right hand engulfed mine in a leathery grip and I held onto it for longer than might have been called for," says detective Cecil Younger of a meeting with an ancient bearer of secrets about old and new murders. "It wasn't until after my grip tightened on his that I felt the quaver of his body his left hand betrayed. I saw in his blue eyes the distant haze of ice, the toehold of confusion and uncertainty. William Flynn was a very old man in a durable body. His soul was a weary traveler. Looking at him I began to feel uncomfortable, as if I were walking over a canyon on a narrow railroad bridge hearing a train whistle far down the line." Available in paperback are Straley's other wonderful books about Younger, The Curious Eat Themselves, The Music of What Happens, and The Woman Who Married a Bear.

(retrieved from Amazon Fri, 24 Apr 2009 07:58:17 -0400)

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