"N" Is for Noose
First edition cover | |
Author | Sue Grafton |
---|---|
Country | United States |
Language | English |
Series | Alphabet Mysteries |
Genre | Mystery |
Publisher | Henry Holt and Company |
Publication date | 1998 |
Media type | Print (Hardcover) |
Pages | 289 pp (first edition) |
ISBN | 978-0-8050-3650-3 |
OCLC | 38024221 |
813/.54 21 | |
LC Class | PS3557.R13 N2 1998 |
Preceded by | "M" Is for Malice |
Followed by | "O" Is for Outlaw |
"N" Is for Noose is the 14th novel in Sue Grafton's "Alphabet" series of mystery novels[1] and features Kinsey Millhone, a private eye based in Santa Teresa, California,[2] although much of this novel's action takes place outside that fictional city.[3] The novel was a New York Times best-seller.[4]
Plot summary
The fourteenth of the alphabet novels takes place mainly in the small-town mountain community of Nota Lake, California (population 2,356, elevation 4,312) where Kinsey has inherited a client called Selma Newquist from her periodic boyfriend Robert Dietz, temporarily out of action back home in Carson City, where Kinsey has reluctantly been taking care of him following knee surgery. Through much of the novel there is an oppressive feeling of both physical and metaphorical cold as Kinsey tries to cope with being out of her Santa Teresa comfort zone. Selma's brief is vague: she fears her husband Tom, a sheriff's officer who died of a heart attack a few weeks before, had something on his mind at the time of his death, and she wants Kinsey to find out what it was.
With very little to go on, Kinsey needs all the help she can get, but it is not forthcoming from the residents of the insular community, where she finds Tom was held in high respect, whilst reactions to Selma range from tolerance for Tom's sake to downright dislike. Tom's colleagues in the sheriff's department, including Tom's partner Rafer LaMott and brother Macon Newquist, close ranks around his memory, though their respective wives, as well as Selma's 25-year-old hunk of a son by her first marriage, Brant, are slightly more friendly and helpful, as is CHP officer James Tennyson, who found Tom's body. A frustrating search of Tom's home office reveals nothing more than some doodling and a list of phone numbers, but it seems someone is worried about what Kinsey might find when she is first threatened by a masked driver, and then attacked in her temporary accommodation, the dismally unwelcoming Nota Lake Cabins run by Tom's elder sister Cecilia Boden.
Retreating to Santa Teresa to almost literally lick her wounds (two dislocated fingers and a beaten-up jaw), Kinsey follows up leads from the phone numbers she found in Tom's office, from which she finds Tom was interested in the case of a petty criminal, Alfie Toth, whom he had traced to a hotel in Santa Teresa before Toth died in what might have been a murder or a bizarre suicide. Toth's unusual death has curious similarities to that of a prison associate of his, career-criminal, child-abuser and rapist Pinkie Ritter, who died 5 years earlier but whose body only came to light near Nota Lake shortly before Toth was killed. Following up more of Tom's recent phone calls, Kinsey traces local sheriff's department officer Colleen Sellers, who had been in love with Tom, who reluctantly assists with information that Tom was suspicious that someone close to him was responsible for the deaths of both Toth and Ritter. When she also finds out that one of Ritter's daughters, Margaret, worked for Tom at the sheriff's department, Kinsey reluctantly realises she has to return to Nota Lake to wrap up the case. Now enduring open hostility in the town and a sinister atmosphere of danger and unsure who she can trust, Kinsey discovers that Rafer's daughter Barrett has had Tom's missing field notes since his death - but they are in code. Belatedly, Kinsey cracks the code and realises that the threat comes not from one of Tom's colleagues, but his step-son, Brant, who had himself been sexually abused by Ritter, killed him in retaliation and then killed witness Toth later when he found out through Tom's investigation where Toth was. It was the realisation that Brant had committed murder, and that Brant had found Toth through him, which was causing Tom's anguish before his death. Despite being unwittingly drugged by Brant in a final showdown, Kinsey manages to subdue him, much to Selma's horror.
References
- ↑ Lipez, Richard (1998-05-17). "Mysteries: High Anxiety". The Washington Post.
- ↑ Macknee, Salem (1997-10-05). "Grafton Loves Her Letters, Alphabetic and Otherwise". The Charlotte Observer. p. 5D.
- ↑ McGill, Leslie (1998-05-04). "Mountain town mystery 'N' Is for Noose has Kinsey Millhone once again searching for justice". The Kansas City Star. p. D6.
- ↑ Dickinson, Jane (1998-06-21). "'Easter Bunny' dishes up a Southern-fried murder". Denver Rocky Mountain News.
External links
- Grafton, Sue (1998). "N" is for Noose. Macmillan. ISBN 978-0-8050-3650-3.