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22 of 22 copies available
22 of 22 copies available

A romantic getaway in the Poconos with Stiletto leads to a bizarre murder that sends Bubbles to a perpetually burning town, pierogi-wielding female assassins (think Pussy Galore in support hose with potatoes), and a mysterious assassin who wants Bubbles's investigation to go up in flames.

"Some mystery series lose steam as they go on, but this third installment in the Bubbles Yablonsky series is a page-turner. The zany characters and plot are similar to the popular Janet Evanovich Stephanie Plum series."—BookReporter

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    • Publisher's Weekly

      May 26, 2003
      Agatha winner Strohmeyer provides lots of madcap fun in her third book (after 2002's Bubbles in Trouble) to feature budding reporter/detective/hairdresser Bubbles Yablonsky. Lured into an unused Pennsylvania coal mine, Bubbles and her "Mel Gibson dead ringer" photographer boyfriend, Steve Stiletto, narrowly escape harm in a cave-in right after they stumble on car-sales magnate Bud Price with "a six-inch bloody hole blown into the middle of his chest." They also find the abandoned car of Bubbles's cousin-in-law, Carl "Stinky" Koolball, the cartographer for McMullen Coal, the company that owns the mine. And now Stinky's missing. The plot thickens like a vat of kapusta as more and more ingredients are added—perhaps too many. On top of her crime-solving, Bubbles must deal with her rebellious teenage daughter, her biker-chick mother's vendetta over some stolen Polish recipes, and a clean-cut stud named Zeke who keeps following her. Some lines are laugh-out-loud funny. Asked if she knows who John Gotti was, Bubbles is "almost positive ran a pizza parlor in Allentown." The dumb-blonde schtick works well with the whole loony business, and Strohmeyer's sharp eye for styles and regional details (Tastykakes, scrapple) adds to the realism and the charm. Agent, Heather Schroder at ICM. (June 30)Forecast:Dressed in blonde wig and stiletto heels like her heroine, Strohmeyer draws increasing crowds on her author tours. Her publisher is betting that Bubbles will be the next Stephanie Plum, her obvious prototype, but Strohmeyer's writing needs to be more disciplined, less scattershot before Janet Evanovich fans come over in big numbers.

    • AudioFile Magazine
      Bubbles Yablonsky--brainy, brassy, bosomy beautician/reporter/detective--only wants a romp in the hay with sexy photojournalist Steve Stiletto. But murder, scandal, scoops, and mayhem keep interrupting. And, as in the other delightful comic whodunits in which Bubbles stars, the plot pales in importance next to the banter, badinage, and pratfalls of Ms. Y and her editor; brilliant daughter; blue-collar friends, relations, and customers; pesky ex-husband; and, last but far from least, her wayfaring, irresistible object of desire. Oddly, the clumsy, albeit enthusiastic, intonations of Barbara McCulloh add, rather than detract, imbuing the narrative with an endearing trailer-trash charm, even though she doesn't get all the jokes or bring home all of the values. Y.R. (c) AudioFile 2005, Portland, Maine

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