From Publishers Weekly Irish author Gill captures the reader's full attention with the humor and inventiveness of the eighth adventure featuring Chief Inspector Peter McGarr of the Dublin police. Trinity College professor Kevin Coyle is found fatally stabbed after leading Joyce devotees on the annual Bloomsday tour, in the figurative footsteps of Stephen Daedalus and Leopold Bloom in Ulysses. McGarr learns that Coyle had been resented for his success at Trinity College and despised for his "profoundly working-class" background. The dead man's wife, Katie, names two academics as the victim's bitter rivals, but they are only two suspects in a case that offers a mass of conflicting evidence and alibis more inventive than plausible. To McGarr's amazement, Katie Coyle's "sisters"--feminist supporters--deceive rather than help the widow, but their posturing, by contrast, gains respect for "Rut'ie" Bresnahan, the woman on McGarr's squad, and a true feminist. After helping to catch the guilty, she has the last word, echoing Molly Bloom: " . . . it'd be much better for the world to be governed by the women . . . " BOMC alternate. Copyright 1989 Reed Business Information, Inc. New York Times Book Review An absolute joy...A profoundly clever literary mystery. --This text refers to the Paperback edition. See all Editorial Reviews |
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