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The Bishop and The Missing L Train by Andrew M. Greeley
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The Bishop and The Missing L Train

by Andrew M. Greeley

Series: Blackie Ryan Mysteries (11)

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A new, ultra-conservative auxiliary bishop is causing headaches for Cardinal Archbishop Sean Cronin and his éminence grise, Bishop John Blackwood Ryan. Still, when Bishop Quill disappears, someone has to find out what happened to him, and as usual, it falls to Bishop Ryan to "See to it, Blackie."

An entertaining mystery, and my favourite of Andrew Greeley's Bishop Blackie novels. ( )
  Poodlerat | Sep 1, 2007 |
This book was ok. Doubt I'll ever read another Blackie book after this one. I was a little annoyed with the catch phrases from Bishop Blackie that was going on throughout the whole book. I did not guess the perpertrator, so I guess the book is good in that way that I was suprised at the end of the book. ( )
  angelofmine1974 | Sep 16, 2006 |
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Book description

Amazon.com (ISBN 0812575962, Mass Market Paperback)

The Bishop and the Missing L Train is the ninth entry in Andrew Greeley's deservedly popular Father Blackie Ryan series. Auxiliary Bishop Augustus Quill, recently posted to the Chicago Archdiocese, could not be described as a loved man. His nickname, bestowed upon him by fellow seminarians, is "Idiot." Despite his relatively high position, one that implies significant intelligence, wit, piety, and compassion, the man seems lacking in all departments save piety. In fact, so disliked is Quill that someone is willing to stop at nothing--at least nothing short of absconding with an entire subway car, bishop included--to keep him from his appointed rounds.

Sean Cardinal Cronin, the Archbishop of Chicago, is no more a fan of Quill's than anyone. Still, the act of losing a bishop (or, more precisely, not retrieving an absconded-with bishop) would not be smiled upon by Rome. Fortunately for Cronin (and fans of humorous, clever, well-written amateur-sleuth mysteries everywhere), Bishop Blackie Ryan is on his side.

"We cannot permit this, Blackwood!"

"Indeed."

"Auxiliary bishops do not slip into the fourth dimension, not in this archdiocese."

"Patently."

"Especially they do not disappear on L trains that also disappear, right?"

"Right!"

"You yourself have said that we will be the prime suspects, have you not? Don't we have powerful reasons for wanting to get rid of him?"

"Arguably," I sighed. "However, as you well know, in the best traditions of the Sacred College we would have dispatched Idiot with poison."

As with any amateur sleuth worth the paper he's written on, Ryan has a cadre of variously talented (and oft-related) professionals--cops, psychologists, reporters, etc.--at his beck and call. And good thing, too, for there are that many and more likely suspects--about the same number, arguably, as there are reasons to devour the entire Ryan series. The Bishop and the Missing L Train is another ecclesiastical lulu. --Michael Hudson

(retrieved from Amazon Fri, 24 Apr 2009 07:58:04 -0400)

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