Freezer Burn
by Gayle Carline
Publisher: Dancing Corgi Press
Release Date: 22 November 2012
ASIN: B007ZHVDN4
Format: Kindle book
Pages: 316
Genre: Mystery
Time to read: 3 days
Source: Amazon (Free at the time; One Hundred Free Books) [20 October 2014]
aStore Link: Freezer Burn
Summary
(from Goodreads)
Peri Minneopa has heard her name mangled a thousand ways to Sunday and hates them all. What she does like are clean houses, and dirty martinis. She recently traded in her housecleaning business for a P.I. license. Her timing seems perfect, when she cleans a former client's freezer and finds a severed hand inside, wearing an expensive ring. The client, Benny Needles, is a Dean Martin fanatic who swears he's innocent. But where there's a hand, there's a body, waiting to be found.
It's a brand new world for Peri, and she has a lot to learn. Her boyfriend, Skip, a detective in the Placentia Police Department warns Peri that this case could be dangerous, but she can't stop sticking her nose into the middle of things. Her first lesson is that investigating murder can have bad consequences. In the middle of trying to solve the case, Peri takes on a surveillance job. The philandering husband is unhappy with her, and she discovers that even surveillance isn't always low risk.
As the two cases collide, will Peri learn the truth behind both of them? And more important, will she ever get that dirty martini?
My Reaction
The premise of Freezer Burn being a sharp-eyed, middle-aged woman leaving behind her house cleaning days for a new career as an investigator of insurance fraud-slash-marital infidelity cases really caught my attention. Not just that whole unique combination, but also some protagonist features that I really haven't encountered before. Most of the time our literary hero of the mystery genre is a seasoned veteran of the police force stepping out on his own, or a highly intelligent fresh-out-of-criminology class, twenty-something female (Miss Marple notwithstanding). The cleverly named Peri Minneopa (now one of my favorite character names) uses her eye for detail and strong will to team up with her boyfriend Skip (often against his wishes) in a case she stumbles into involving a character (Benny) whose quirks only she really seems to understand.
The flow of the story seemed to give me an idea of the thought process in the holistic, multitasking mind typical of the female psyche vs. the compartmentalized mind of a male (the latter of which I am very familiar with). While Peri is doing her day job of filling out insurance investigation paperwork, she also thinking of what a suspect on Benny's case said, planning a date with Skip, and worried about her biological time clock all at once; and I think the author presented it clearly enough that my mind was multitasking with her.
The characters were interesting, although some of the sideline people seemed to have come out of the hammerspace to bring in a new clue or plot detail then disappeared. There were also a few moments that seemed a bit too convenient in order to move the plot along, but not really enough to push me out of the story. These and the need for a copyeditor (to run through the book again are what pushed my rating down to 4 stars.
I've also read a few other reviews criticizing the character for not being smart enough to use ... well, a very feminine item that is also a plot device so I won't explain exactly what it is. But, regarding the criticism, I know many people (myself included) who are very intelligent in a number of fields, but something common (particularly common sense) is something that seems to evade their grasp.
Ultimately I found Freezer Burn an enjoyable and often humorous read that kept me guessing what the conclusion would be almost up to the last couple chapters. As this was the first in a series, I will certainly be looking forward to joining the Peri Minneopa Mysteries again soon.
Reading Challenges: 2015 Authors A to Z Reading Challenge, 2015 eBook Reading Challenge
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