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SECRETS TYPED IN BLOOD by Stephen Spotswood

SECRETS TYPED IN BLOOD

by Stephen Spotswood

Pub Date: Dec. 13th, 2022
ISBN: 978-0-385-54926-4
Publisher: Doubleday

Early 1947 provides Lillian Pentecost and Willowjean Parker with a baffling new case and a continuation of an old one that just won’t go away.

Someone has been copying prolific pulp magazine writer Holly Quick’s stories. And it’s not just an ordinary plagiarist, but someone who’s bringing them to sanguinary life and death. The job Holly offers the one-eyed private eye and her hand-picked sidekick—to identify and decommission the copycat killer—should be straightforward, but it comes with a raft of restrictions. Holly won’t permit Lillian and Willow to go to the police or reveal her identity as the person behind all her male pseudonyms. She hides important information from them that they really need to know. Lillian is determined to start the investigation during the same two-week period when Willow is already unhappily undercover as secretary Jean Palmer at the law firm of Shirley & Wise, where her predecessor as Kenneth Shirley’s secretary was criminal mastermind Olivia Waterhouse, an old adversary of Lillian’s whose motives for her masquerade are a lot less clear than Willow’s. As if these aren’t enough difficulties, Darryl Klinghorn, the bedroom-peeping shamus Lillian hires to gather information on the three victims murdered in homages to Holly’s fiction, ends up getting killed himself, running his inquiries into an emphatic dead end. Both cases have their high points (lots of curveballs and some smartly retro feminism) and their low (the copycat is eventually unmasked as an entirely marginal figure, and the windup of the Waterhouse case is at once melodramatic, anticlimactic, and inconclusive).

Untidy but undeniably engaging.