A middle school teacher’s end-of-term project lands her smack in the middle of murder.
Nora Best is doing her darnedest to repair her life after a traumatic stint at a residential program for troubled girls. Teaching seventh grade at Peninsula Middle School in a coastal town between Seattle and Portland has its challenges, but it offers Nora a chance to get in touch with her creative side. Her frustrations include Principal Louann Everhart, who sarcastically congratulates her after the school’s latest tsunami drill on shepherding almost half her class to safety. But the same drill gives Nora incentive to collaborate with colleague Sheila Connor on a joint class project sampling local citizens’ reactions to a tsunami tower that local developer Spencer Templeton is building. Although the tower is a loss leader for Templeton, whose real aim is to get approval to build a luxury hotel at the sandy end of the peninsula, it’s controversial enough to invite Nora’s band of budding Woodwards and Bernsteins to explore a wide range of public opinion. Unfortunately, it’s also controversial enough to land Nora in the middle of the investigation of the death of environmental activist Ward Austin, who opposed the project, and whose body is discovered near the shore during the drill. Florio gives a neat tutorial on how to probe a political issue from a variety of perspectives without necessarily taking sides. Although the solution to the puzzle is a little pat, watching Nora with her students is a dream.
Florio continues to put a contemporary spin on the old-fashioned whodunit.