book cover of Of Course You Know That Chocolate Is a Vegetable
 

Of Course You Know That Chocolate Is a Vegetable

(2000)
And Other Stories
A collection of stories by

 
 
Awards
1999 Macavity Award for Best Mystery Short Story
1998 Agatha Award for Best Short Story

Kirkus Reviews
You're in good company when you're with Officers Suze Figueroa and Norm Bennis of the Chicago Police Department, or with freelance reporter Cat Marsala-and they're on hand for most of the 12 tales collected here (six for the cops, one for Cat, one in which Cat improbably investigates a complaint against the cops). Especially in dealing with Figueroa and Bennis, D'Amato (Help Me Please, 1999, etc.) repeatedly strikes a fine balance between warm domesticity and authentic detail. The problem is the anemic plots. Most of the stories, from "Shelved" to "Soon to Be a Minor Motion Picture," turn on a single forgettable clue: "The Lower Wacker Hilton" recycles one of the oldest urban legends around; "Hard Feelings" and "See No Evil" work the same deception twice (and readers will see it coming the second time). When D'Amato works outside the box, the results once again are atmospheric rather than rigorous. Dolley Madison turns up to solve a White House mystery by noticing a single telltale clue; a hard-bitten reporter remembers the magical time of his flat (and noncriminal) interview with Greta Garbo; a honeymoon couple stops at a motel on Route 66-with horrific, though wildly unlikely, results. As for the award-winning, slenderly plotted title story, in which a disgruntled author gets her revenge on a curmudgeonly reviewer, you're certainly not going to read anything unkind about it here.


Genre: Mystery

Visitors also looked at these books

cover of On My Honor
On My Honor
Malacai Black

Used availability for Barbara D'Amato's Of Course You Know That Chocolate Is a Vegetable


About Fantastic Fiction       Information for Authors