Thursday, April 24, 2014

Review: The Color of Light by Wendy Hornsby

Mysterious Reviews: Reviews of New Mysteries, Novels of Suspense, and Thrillers

A Mysterious Review of The Color of Light by Wendy Hornsby. A Maggie MacGowen Mystery.

Review summary: The puzzle-like storyline, spanning a 30-year-period, with its bits and pieces coming in dribs and drabs, makes it seem like a picture of what happened one day long ago when a woman was murdered will never emerge. A fine mystery overall in a series that continues to reward readers with multi-layered plots and a cast of engaging characters. (Click here for text of full review.)

Our rating: 4 of 5 stars

The Color of Light Wendy Hornsby

The Color of Light
Wendy Hornsby
A Maggie MacGowen Mystery
Perseverance Press (March 2014)

Publisher synopsis: Filmmaker Maggie MacGowen learns the hard way that going home again can be deadly. While clearing out her deceased father's desk, Maggie discovers that he had locked away potential evidence in a brutal unsolved murder 30 years earlier. When she begins to ask questions of family and old friends, it emerges that there are people in that seemingly tranquil multi-ethnic Berkeley neighborhood who will go to lethal lengths to prevent the truth from coming out.

With the help of her new love, Jean-Paul Bernard, Maggie uncovers secrets about the murdered Vietnamese mother of a good friend and learns how the crime affected — and continues to affect — the still close-knit neighborhood. The more she finds out, the greater the threat of violence becomes, not only for the long-time neighborhood residents, but even for Maggie herself.

Available from Amazon.com  Available from Kobo

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