1982; 308 pages. New Author? : No. Book 1 (out of 25) in the “Kinsey Millhone” series. Genres: Private Investigator Mystery; Hard-Boiled
Mystery. Overall Rating : 7½*/10.
It promises to be a easy but strange case for
PI Kinsey Millhone. Nikki Fife wants her
to investigate the killing of her late husband, Laurence Fife. That sounds fairly routine, but there are a
couple of weird aspects.
First off, this is a cold
case, since Laurence’s death occurred quite some time ago. Nikki was accused and convicted of murdering
him and has just been released from prison after serving eight years. During her incarceration she never attempted
to initiate an investigation. So why start one now?
Secondly, Laurence was killed
in a most unusual way: he was poisoned via oleander, ground up into a powder, then slipped into one of the medication tablets he was taking. Outside of his wife, who would have access
to his medicines?
Nonetheless, Nikki is willing
to pay handsomely for Kinsey’s efforts. And
it turns out lots of people hated Laurence for lots of reasons, most of them
involving infidelity. So there are lots of suspects for Kinsey to look into.
And since she’s already served
her time, Nikki wouldn’t have reason to want further investigating, unless she
actually innocent, amiright?
What’s To Like...
A is for Alibi
is the first book in Sue Grafton’s popular “Alphabet Series”, published over the course of 35
years, and closing with Y is for Yesterday. Sadly, Ms. Grafton passed away before writing
the “Z” installment.
Despite it being a cold case,
things quickly get complicated. Kinsey
discovers there was a second oleander-poisoning death back around the time of
Laurence’s demise. More chilling, and
more timely, one of the present suspects is murdered right after Kinsey contacts her. Someone is worried about the new probe.
A is for Alibi was
published in 1982 and it was fun to note some of the bygone things
mentioned: cameras needed a roll of
film; a room at a cheap hotel only cost $11.95 per night; college students used
“blue books” when taking exams; and dial phones could be slammed down to terminate a
conversation. I was happy to see one of
my alma maters, Arizona State University, get mentioned, and smiled when it was
revealed that one of the characters created crossword puzzles as a pastime.
A key break comes courtesy of a child's offhand remark. I'm proud to say I picked up on that, but I couldn’t connect the dots. Fortunately, Kinsey could, but even so, another plot twist jumped up and roiled the waters again. Things wrap up with an obligatory chase scene; with the bad folks getting their deserved comeuppance and all the killings being solved.
Ratings…
Amazon: 4.1*/5, based on 13,431 ratings
and 1,563 reviews.
Goodreads: 3.86*/5,
based on 184,374
ratings and 5,811 reviews.
Excerpts...
He was thirty-nine years old when he
died. That Nikki was accused, tried, and
convicted was just a piece of bad luck.
Except for cases that clearly involve a homicidal maniac, the police
like to believe murders are committed by those we know and love, and most of
the time they’re right—a chilling thought when you sit down to dinner with a
family of five. All those potential
killers passing their plates. (pg. 8)
Claremont is an oddity in that it resembles
a trim little midwestern hamlet with elms and picket fences. The annual Fourth of July parade is composed
of kazoo bands, platoons of children on crepe-paper-decorated bikes, and a
self-satirizing team of husbands dressed in Bermuda shorts, black socks, and
business shoes doing close-order drills with power mowers. Except for the smog, Claremont could even be
considered “picturesque” with Mount Baldy forming a raw backdrop. (pg. 162)
“The only cleavage
I got left, I sit on.” (pg.
31)
The cussing is light: just 11 cases in the first 20% of the book.
One of those was an f-bomb though; and later on, there are a couple
rolls-in-the-hay plus two instances of profane terms being used to describe sensual
parts of the body.
I had a couple quibbles, but
they’re minor. The ending, although suitably exciting, is rather conveniently resolved by Kinsey simply firing
first. And throughout the tale, the
storyline goes off on a tangent of Kinsey working on a unrelated case. I kept waiting for it to somehow tie into the
main plot thread, but it never did.
As a first effort, A is for Alibi is a promising tale, with
enough action and intrigue to keep me turning the pages. This was my second Kinsey Millhone book (the
other one is reviewed here), and I get the sense that the author hones her
writing skills nicely as the series progresses.
I have a bunch more of her works on my Kindle and TBR shelf, and look forward to more books in this series.
7½ Stars. An interesting sidelight, courtesy of the Wikipedia article for A is for Alibi. Sue Grafton was going through a divorce while writing this book, and admits about her husband that she “would lie in bed at night thinking of ways to kill him.” Oy.
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