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Grand Master of crime fiction Dorothy Salisbury Davis introduces one of her most winning heroines, Julie Hayes, a former actress turned fortune-teller who abruptly learns there is murder in her futureTwenty-five-year-old Julie Hayes is feeling overshadowed by her globe-trotting journalist husband and looking for some excitement and direction in life. On what amounts to a dare, she sets herself up as "Friend Julie," a storefront fortune-teller in Manhattan's seedy Theater District.
Now Julie show more finds herself concerned with the lives of the neighborhood eccentrics, old friends from the Actors Forum, and street characters such as Goldie the pimp, a wealthy gangster, and a young prostitute who wants Julie to help her escape The Life. But a man is found murdered in the girl's room—a man Julie can identify for the police. Thrust into the investigation of the man's death, Julie discovers a new direction for her life, but her tarot cards reveal a future she might not live to see.
A Death in The Life is the first novel in Dorothy Salisbury Davis's Julie Hayes mystery series, which also includes Scarlet Night, Lullaby of Murder, and The Habit of Fear, as well as the stories "The Puppet" and "Justina" in the collection In the Still of the Night. show less
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Although published in 1976, A Death in the Life exudes a certain late 1950s Greenwich Village vibe. After all, who really said After all, who still really said “dig it” to mean “like” or “understand” by the time Gerald Ford was president?
Our protagonist, Julie Hayes, is a second-rate actress who takes refuge in a marriage to Geoffrey Hayes, a New York Times columnist 15 years her senior. With him gone on assignment so much, Julie spends her time in the sort of housewifely boredom easily recognized by anyone who has read The Feminine Mystique. Julie decides to turn to fortune telling to beat her ennui, teaches herself tarot reading, and sets up shop in West 44th Street, which was quite a dicey neighborhood in New York City in show more the 1970s.
While there, Julie makes the acquaintance of a young prostitute named Rita Morgan. Soon thereafter, Julie’s friend, Pete Mallory, who lives a floor above Rita, is found murdered in Rita’s apartment with Rita nowhere to be found. What connection could there possibly have been between Peter Mallory, a renowned off-Broadway scene designer and the center of the Actors Forum, and a young runaway turned street walker? Julie decides to find out, as much to discover who Pete Mallory really was as to discover the identity of his murderer.
I loved enmeshing myself in the life of Julie Hayes, a severely clinically depressed woman wandering aimlessly through her own life. In A Death in the Life, it is Pete’s death that gives Julie’s life some much-needed meaning. I really look forward to seeing where she goes and how she heals in this four-book series. The book was not quite noir and not really a cozy but a hybrid, and I enjoyed it despite it’s neither fish-nor-fowl quality. show less
Our protagonist, Julie Hayes, is a second-rate actress who takes refuge in a marriage to Geoffrey Hayes, a New York Times columnist 15 years her senior. With him gone on assignment so much, Julie spends her time in the sort of housewifely boredom easily recognized by anyone who has read The Feminine Mystique. Julie decides to turn to fortune telling to beat her ennui, teaches herself tarot reading, and sets up shop in West 44th Street, which was quite a dicey neighborhood in New York City in show more the 1970s.
While there, Julie makes the acquaintance of a young prostitute named Rita Morgan. Soon thereafter, Julie’s friend, Pete Mallory, who lives a floor above Rita, is found murdered in Rita’s apartment with Rita nowhere to be found. What connection could there possibly have been between Peter Mallory, a renowned off-Broadway scene designer and the center of the Actors Forum, and a young runaway turned street walker? Julie decides to find out, as much to discover who Pete Mallory really was as to discover the identity of his murderer.
I loved enmeshing myself in the life of Julie Hayes, a severely clinically depressed woman wandering aimlessly through her own life. In A Death in the Life, it is Pete’s death that gives Julie’s life some much-needed meaning. I really look forward to seeing where she goes and how she heals in this four-book series. The book was not quite noir and not really a cozy but a hybrid, and I enjoyed it despite it’s neither fish-nor-fowl quality. show less
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Author Information

30+ Works 643 Members
Dorothy Salisbury Davis was born on April 25, 1916. She received a degree in literature from Barat College in 1938. In the depths of the Depression, she got a job as a magician's assistant. She later worked in public relations for a meatpacking company before becoming an author. During her lifetime, she wrote 17 crime novels, three historical show more novels, and many short stories. Her works included A Gentle Murderer, the Julie Hayes Mysteries series, and Black Sheep, White Lamb. She received a lifetime achievement award from The Mystery Writers of America. In 1986, she helped found Sisters in Crime. She died on August 3, 2014 at the age of 98. (Bowker Author Biography) show less
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Virago Modern Classics (426)
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- Original publication date
- 1976
- Dedication
- For Lucy,
friend and abettor - First words
- What am I doing here? What am I doing here...?
- Last words
- (Click to show. Warning: May contain spoilers.)'You bet.'
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- 66
- Popularity
- 464,488
- Reviews
- 1
- Rating
- (3.70)
- Languages
- English
- Media
- Paper, Audiobook, Ebook
- ISBNs
- 7
- ASINs
- 2






























































