Kit Franklyn, lately drowning in personal doubts about her life and career, thinks that investigating the corpse she found in the garden of her new home will be the perfect distraction. Together with her boss, the loveable and unconventional chief medical examiner Andy Broussard, she sets out to solve this case that’s growing colder by the minute. Though they identify the body as a missing hooker, now dead for twenty seven years, all hope of conviction seems lost—until the unorthodox duo link the body and two recent murders to a group of local, wealthy physicians.
Don't let the obvious title fool you, this is a wonderful treat for someone to get to read scenery and characters that are very Louisianian. Great Pulp with an "X-Files" bent.
There's definitely a lot of fun and interesting things happening in this series, and this book is no exception. My only complaint is that Donaldson uses Kit to get into sticky situations that ramp up the drama. While generally ok, there are many cases where such a highly intelligent lady does some mighty dumb things. I'm hoping this doesn't become an often-used device.
The atmosphere of New Orleans and the surrounding area are intriguing with many hidden delights of culture seeping into the stories by Donaldson. I have enjoyed others in the series a great deal more than this one. There was too much emphasis on the personal relationship of Franklyn which detracted from the mystery and the scientific interest for me.
This was enjoyable on several levels: as a mystery, in its character development, for its setting and for the variety of esoteric information on display.
Criminal psychologist Kit Franklyn has the misfortune to find a human skeleton in her backyard while digging to plant a rose garden. Kit works for Andy Broussard, New Orleans Chief Medical Officer, & between them they dig up the dirt on the 25-year-old corpse: murder by strangulation. Two more violent deaths follow in quick succession, death by shark & death by de-escalation. Murder has a long memory.
Kit Franklyn & Andy Broussard are likeable, the book was reasonably entertaining with its gruesome murders & there's enjoyable interaction between various law enforcement characters. I could have done without Kit's I'm-too-stupid-to-live moments, Miss Independent could have been Miss Dearly Departed quite easily - remember that kids! Still, it was a nice, easy read, & just what I wanted today.
Brian Troxell continues to swing a home run as a narrator, but these Franklyn/Broussard novels are offering severely diminished returns. This had all the potential to be a thrilling “not so” cold case, and instead just came off as sexist and dull…despite having a shark attack, a boar attack, AND an alligator attack!!
A good entry in the Broussard/Franklyn series as Franklyn discovers a body buried in her yard. Good pacing, nice characters, exciting conclusion. Recommended to Broussard/Franklyn fans.
This is an entertaining story. It's made a little less so by Dr. Franklyn's irritating habit of going off and being "strong and independent" while jeopardizing herself and whatever case Andy and Gatlin are working on.
I guess that this is a hallmark of certain types of fiction written in the late 1980's and early 90's (when these books were originally written), where women had to prove themselves. Actually, she's kind of silly so I hope she will outgrow this phase!
Andy and Gatlin ride to the rescue again, when Kit gets in over her head. The story is well written and Donaldson definitely has a way with words and comparisons.
NO MARDI GRAS FOR THE DEAD - Okay Donaldson, D.J. - standalone
When a twenty-year-old corpse is discovered in her backyard, criminal psychologist Kit Franklyn attempts to learn how it could be linked to two subsequent violent murders and uncovers a secret in New Orlean's French Quarter.