Friday, April 23, 2021

Friday Memes: Bootlegger's Daughter by Margaret Maron

 Happy Friday everybody!

Book Beginnings on Friday is now hosted by Rose City ReaderThe Friday 56 is hosted at Freda's Voice. Check out the links above for the rules and for the posts of the participants each week. Don’t dig for your favorite book, the coolest, the most intellectual. Use the CLOSEST.

Beginning:
Possum Creek trickles out of a swampy waste a little south of Raleigh. By the time it gets down to Cotton Grove, in the western part of Colleton County, it's a respectable stream, deep enough to float rafts and canoes for several miles at a stretch.
Friday 56:
"And that was the last time anyone was positive that they'd seen Janie Poole Whitehead alive," said Scotty.
This week I'm spotlighting the first book in a mystery series that is new to me. I heard about Bootlegger's Daughter by Margaret Maron after the author passed away and some other authors I admire talked about her influence on their work. 

Here is the description from Amazon:
Deborah Knott was expected to be a conventional little girl and eventually a conventional woman, worshipped on a pedestal by a conventional husband.
Instead, she became an attorney, infiltrating the old boy network that still rules the tobacco country of Colleton County, North Carolina. Some say her success is a sign of the New South, but no one knows better than she the power of the past—her family’s long history in the area is a major asset in her campaign for district judge. Then again, as the strong-willed daughter of Kezzie Knott—notorious bootlegger, ex-con, and political string-puller—history is also one of her greatest problems.

But it’s an episode from the more recent past that threatens to derail her campaign. As a teen, Deborah used to babysit little Gayle Whitehead for her mother, Janie. One rainy spring day eighteen years ago, both mother and daughter disappeared. When they were found three days later Gayle was dehydrated, dirty, and hungry...and Janie was dead. The unsolved murder became a local legend and an enigma that continues to haunt Gayle, who now begs Deborah to investigate.

With no real faith in her investigative skills, Deborah asks a variety of questions on her campaign tour of the county’s rallies—and soon her attention is distracted from the hurly-burly of politics by troubling new evidence. Deborah now faces the realization that the disadvantages of being the single female candidate in a southern judgeship race, and even the disadvantages of being Kezzie Knott’s daughter, are nothing in comparison to posing a threat to a successful murderer...

4 comments:

  1. Another new author and book for me. Thanks for the update.

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  2. I love the sound of this one! Thanks for sharing, and here's mine: “HER THREE LIVES”

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  3. I'm curious for more based off that 56! Happy weekend!

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  4. Margaret Maron has always been at the top of my must-try author list. I've bought a few of her books over the years, but haven't cracked the spines yet.

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