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Murder in the Charleston Manner
(1990)(The second book in the Sheila Travis series)
A novel by Patricia Sprinkle
Publisher's Weekly
In her second appearance, following Murder at Markham , Chicago-based Sheila Travis, visits her Aunt Mary in Atlanta. She is bullied into helping invalid Dolly Langdon, Mary's old friend who's worried about a series of accidents affecting her venerable Charleston family, whose members include her antique-dealer sister and two college-student granddaughters. Soon after Sheila arrives at Dolly's ancestral home in Charleston, the heirloom silver and Bible are stolen, followed by the death of Dolly's nurse, Francine Jenkins, whom many of Dolly's relatives had good reason to dislike. The brutal murder of a next-door neighbor involves the police; then Sheila is abducted; and Aunt Mary must take matters in hand before the killer is confronted. Sprinkle writes engagingly of Charleston, its mores and the proud, appealing family, but her mystery creaks in spots, with Aunt Mary adding little but unnecessary complications and a decidedly irritating personality.
School Library Journal
YA-- When wheelchair-mobile Dolly Wimberly feels that too many accidents are occurring in her family, her childhood friend sends her niece, amateur detective Sheila Travis, to help. These coincidental nuisances rapidly degenerate into a dangerous situation when several close family friends are murdered. Southern manners and hospitality and a sense of family are well portrayed against a colorful Charleston, South Carolina background. The well-developed, often eccentric characters enrich the plot, adding to the book's intrigue and suspense. --Pam Spencer, Jefferson Sci-Tech, Alexandria, VA
Genre: Mystery
In her second appearance, following Murder at Markham , Chicago-based Sheila Travis, visits her Aunt Mary in Atlanta. She is bullied into helping invalid Dolly Langdon, Mary's old friend who's worried about a series of accidents affecting her venerable Charleston family, whose members include her antique-dealer sister and two college-student granddaughters. Soon after Sheila arrives at Dolly's ancestral home in Charleston, the heirloom silver and Bible are stolen, followed by the death of Dolly's nurse, Francine Jenkins, whom many of Dolly's relatives had good reason to dislike. The brutal murder of a next-door neighbor involves the police; then Sheila is abducted; and Aunt Mary must take matters in hand before the killer is confronted. Sprinkle writes engagingly of Charleston, its mores and the proud, appealing family, but her mystery creaks in spots, with Aunt Mary adding little but unnecessary complications and a decidedly irritating personality.
School Library Journal
YA-- When wheelchair-mobile Dolly Wimberly feels that too many accidents are occurring in her family, her childhood friend sends her niece, amateur detective Sheila Travis, to help. These coincidental nuisances rapidly degenerate into a dangerous situation when several close family friends are murdered. Southern manners and hospitality and a sense of family are well portrayed against a colorful Charleston, South Carolina background. The well-developed, often eccentric characters enrich the plot, adding to the book's intrigue and suspense. --Pam Spencer, Jefferson Sci-Tech, Alexandria, VA
Genre: Mystery
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