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The Bass Wore Scales by Mark Schweizer
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The Bass Wore Scales (edition 2006)

by Mark Schweizer

Series: Liturgical Mystery (Book 5)

MembersReviewsPopularityAverage ratingMentions
805334,857 (3.98)4
For Detective Hayden Konig, things are going well. He enjoys his two jobs, he's independently wealthy, his girlfriend has agreed not to marry him, and no one has been killed in St. Germaine since Palm Sunday.
Member:brewergirl
Title:The Bass Wore Scales
Authors:Mark Schweizer
Info:St. James Music Press (2006), Paperback, 240 pages
Collections:Your library, Personal collection
Rating:***
Tags:fiction, mystery, humor, church, series, North Carolina, read2007

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The Bass Wore Scales by Mark Schweizer

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Showing 5 of 5
A new priest comes to town, causing Hayden to reconsider being the church organist and choir leader. A "talking" gorilla is involved in a murder, and the NASCAR sponsorship gets reworked. ( )
  LindaLeeJacobs | Feb 15, 2020 |
Brother Kilroy, pastor of the New Fellowship Baptist Church, is found murdered in the bathroom attached to his locked study. The main suspect, found in the bathroom with him, is a 500 pound gorilla called Kokomo who has been taught American Sign Language. Can Hayden Konig find the real killer before Kokomo is put down as a dangerous animal?

The funniest part was the Pentecost service, but plenty of other humour in this book. Something to amuse everyone. ( )
  Robertgreaves | Jan 10, 2018 |
This is the fifth in the hilarious liturgical mystery series. It started off a little slow and I was wondering where in the world the author was taking us with a minister killed in his study with the door locked from the inside using a key that was forged and impossible to duplicate. He was ostensibly killed by a guerilla he had brought in there to be baptised.

“Now, if Brother Kilroy’s a Presbyterian or a Methodist, a Lutheran or an Episcopalian, there’s no problem. If Kokomo needs to get baptized, Brother Kilroy could do it with a squirt gun if he had to. But he’s not. He’s a Baptist, and you’re not born again unless you go under for the count. “You know, gorillas usually don’t have a problem with water like chimps do. Kilroy probably would have been fine if he hadn’t tried to hold him under.” “No kidding.”

Never fear, the solution is nicely rational. In the meantime, the racecar driver who was being sponsored by St Barnabas, has been killed after a race and will be buried in his race car with the radio tuned to his favorite country station (but only for five years - that’s all he paid for.) I loved the scene where Hayden talks to the sleezy burial plot retailer who misunderstands Hayden’s request for a special plot, “This here section—Section D—that’s for white folks only.” Meg was horrified. “White folks?” I said. “No, you misunderstand. I want a plot in the No-Smoking section.” “No-Smoking?” “Oh, yeah,” I said.

Or the scene where the PETA protesters mix it up with the NASCAR folks: They had angered the wrong folks. From my vantage point, I saw at least ten of the PETA protesters lying on the ground. The PETA women weren’t faring much better than the men, because, although a male NASCAR fan isn’t likely to hit a woman that he’s not married to, a female NASCAR fan has no such problem, and the ladies were taking advantage of easy pickin’s. The PETA women probably didn’t even realize that brass-knuckles came in designer colors.

The characters are all extremely likeable and there is such an undercurrent of puns and humor it’s difficult not to really enjoy the series. On to # 6. ( )
  ecw0647 | Sep 30, 2013 |
These books just keep getting better, and funnier! I don't find the humor in the side stories written in the [b:Raymond Chandler|2052|The Big Sleep|Raymond Chandler|http://ecx.images-amazon.com/images/I/41AGA624Z5L._SL75_.jpg|1222673] form but in the interactions of the people with their church. Who wouldn't find it funny when someone is killed in a racecar, and then buried it it??? Not to mention what else happens at that funeral. . . no spoilers here. Get started on this series from the beginning and you'll need to keep reading until the newest entry, I know I have! ( )
  bookswoman | Mar 31, 2013 |
I always forget how funny this series is. Once again, the disastrous church service scene had me laughing until I had tears in my eyes, a stitch in my side, and a very puzzled golden retriever watching cautiously from a safe distance. The mystery's not bad, either. ( )
  jjlangel | May 8, 2011 |
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For Detective Hayden Konig, things are going well. He enjoys his two jobs, he's independently wealthy, his girlfriend has agreed not to marry him, and no one has been killed in St. Germaine since Palm Sunday.

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