|
'Till
Death Do Us Part
By Kate White
(Warner Books: $24.00)
Reviewed by: Patricia
Ann Jones
Previous Columns
Save Up to 30% on this book at Amazon.com
True crime writer and sometime-sleuth Bailey Weggins took the media and
mystery worlds by storm in Kate White's sexy and suspenseful debut novel,
"If Looks Could Kill." In "‘Till Death Do Us Part," Bailey takes the
plunge into a world of designer wedding dresses, domestic divas, and
deadly nuptial doings.
Bailey Weggins writes for Gloss magazine. Her pieces are gritty true
crime, and human-interest stories. She's not connected to the glittery,
glossy stuff. She's a Manhattan woman in her early 30s with friends in
high places. She was one of five bridesmaids for Peyton Cross when she
married David Slavin, a much older and richer man.
Peyton Cross-Slavin is a piece of work. She is dubbed the next Martha
Stewart with her fancy catering business in an upscale Greenwich,
Connecticut community. Peyton is a control freak in every sense of the
word. Bailey knows just how controlling Peyton is because she was her
roommate at Brown University. Peyton's wedding was, of course, a lavish
affair perfect down to the smallest detail. But that was last April and it
is now winter. All may not be paradise in the Slavin household, but on the
surface one might not realize this.
Bailey learns that Jamie Howe, also a bridesmaid at Peyton's wedding,
died in an accidental electrocution in her own apartment. It seems a radio
fell into Jamie's bathtub. The police find no evidence of foul play. Then,
another of Peyton's bridesmaids meets a sudden death. Robin Lolly expires
from an allergic reaction to something she either ate or drank. Again, the
police rule the death accidental. It is at this point, Ashley Hanes
contacts Bailey to tell her she needs help. Ashley, you guessed it, was
also a bridesmaid at the Cross-Slavin wedding. It seems Ashley feels
neither Jamie nor Robin's deaths were accidental. Now, Ashley is as slim
as a French baguette, haughty and the kind of woman who would meet you at
a party and look right through you, as if you were a potted palm, but now
she needs help from the one person she knows who has the courage to seek
the truth. Ashley also has something that could be a clue to why she
believes that both Jamie and Robin were murdered and that she and Bailey
could be next in line.
Ashley requests Bailey go with her to Greenwich to look into the
deaths—see if she also feels there is a connection. Bailey believes the
deaths are no more than a dreadful coincidence—but tells Ashley she will
go see Peyton and make some inquiries.
At Peyton's farm home, Ashley falls from a balcony and now three
bridesmaids are dead! Since there were only five to begin with, Bailey now
feels certain foul play is involved. She sets out to find the killer and
the illusive motive for such seemingly senseless murders. Oh yes, it is
murder. Bailey is being stalked in both New York and in Connecticut. Her
car is run off the road in the middle of a blizzard, then someone tries to
kill her in Manhattan, but why? Who? What does the killer think Bailey
knows now that she's talked with Ashley? Could something, as Ashley
believed, have happened at Peyton's wedding that only the bridesmaids
might have seen and not realized what they were seeing?
White takes readers deep into the fascinating world of the rich and
famous as her protagonist races one step ahead of the grim-reaper to solve
murders without obvious motives. Well, of course, motives exist, and every
character who enters the story appears to have one or more for killing the
bridesmaids. Suspense, chills, and more than one spill make "‘Til Death Do
Us Part," a hot page-turner.
White proves she is more than just a two-book novelist. Bailey Weggins
is a protagonist readers will root for right up to the surprising
resolution. White is also the editor in chief of Cosmopolitan magazine,
and shows her wit and skill with a divinely crafted story filled with
details only a writer with her background would know. You won't find a
better summer read than "‘Till Death Do Us Part."
Copyright May 25, 2004, all rights reserved
Save Up to 30% on this book at Amazon.com
Jones is a published writer and book reviewer for Tulsa
World newspaper.
To comment on this review you may email
pattij777@aol.com
Previous
Columns |