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Twombly and Golden County's past and present collide when an archeological team uncovers a buried house that vanished without a trace during a record flood in 1844. When two mummified bodies are found inside, and it's clear that a murder was committed, the archeological team sponsored by Twombly College to discover the Sutton House is replaced by the police. Who killed whom and why? At first the old murder is merely interesting, but then moonshine is added to the cocktail as the old illegal liquor trade has also reappeared and is seeping into Golden County. Teens are the ones drinking it --…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
Twombly and Golden County's past and present collide when an archeological team uncovers a buried house that vanished without a trace during a record flood in 1844. When two mummified bodies are found inside, and it's clear that a murder was committed, the archeological team sponsored by Twombly College to discover the Sutton House is replaced by the police. Who killed whom and why? At first the old murder is merely interesting, but then moonshine is added to the cocktail as the old illegal liquor trade has also reappeared and is seeping into Golden County. Teens are the ones drinking it -- and murder is the result. Will 'Miss Marple' Emory and her 'Nancy Drew' sidekick Madison be able to sort myths and rumors from facts to solve both cases before someone else dies?
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Autorenporträt
Slightly quirky, always creative, Pearl R. Meaker has been an artist and craftsperson her whole life. Although she's always had stories in her head, they didn't come out where others could read them until the advent of home computers with their ease of making corrections and moving bits around. When not playing with her story ideas you can find Pearl reading all sorts of books, knitting or crocheting, doing other arts and crafts, bird watching and photographing nature. She also plays bluegrass fiddle along with her banjo-picking husband. The books in the Can Be Mysteries Series are reminiscent of Agatha Christie's Miss Marple mysteries, which is why Pearl has chosen to characterize her stories as "Murder Genteel."