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Skeleton Canyon: A Joanna Brady Mystery

Skeleton Canyon: A Joanna Brady Mystery

List Price: $7.99
Your Price: $7.19
Product Info Reviews

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Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Another winner from J.A. Jance.
Review: I truly enjoy reading the books of J.A. Jance and this is another good one in the Sheriff Joanna Brady series. J.A. Jance's writing is clear and concise and the characters well drawn. The Arizona settings are wonderfully pictured and provide a great backdrop. The characters seem real and the pages fly by. This is a superb marriage of characters, action, sleuthing and comes to a satisfying conclusion.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: J.A. Jance at her best.
Review: J.A. Jance has brought us two wonderful series: J.P. Beaumont and Joanna Brady. In this book Joanna Brady, lady sheriff, once again battles not only the bad guys, but the good guys in her own department. In this book we see again how Joanna uses her own wits and common sense to beat the rest of them to the answer. Andy would be proud!

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Wonderful
Review: Joanna Brady is the no-nonsense sheriff of a border town in Arizona, and she is thoroughly delightful in this story of murder in the treacherous canyons near the Mexican border.

The recently widowed mother of a 10-year-old girl, Joanna cannot help but be moved by the vicious murder of Brianna O'Brien, the beautiful and popular daughter of the town's most prominent family. The reader, too, is drawn into Brianna's all-too-brief life, and is there with her in Skeleton Canyon as she joyously awaits the arrival of her secret lover, Ignacio Ybarra, equally young, beautiful, and deeply in love. Brianna does not live to meet her lover--but who killed her? And why? It's up to Joanna to find out, and her job is much hampered by the arrogance of Brianna's father, whose distrust of the local law enforcement community is matched only by his racial hatred of Mexican-Americans.

Brianna and Ignacio were involved in a forbidden love affair, at least by the senior O'Brian's lights. Did he find out and have his own daughter killed? It seems highly unlikely, since Ignacio is very much alive--and a suspect. But why would he murder his beloved? What secrets in the O'Brian family coalesced to cause this inevitable tragedy?

While Joanna and her crew struggle to find the answers, the reader is treated to magnificent descriptions of the rugged Southwest, whose beauty masks murderous dangers such as killer flash floods. Equally interesting is the supporting cast: Joanna's friend Angie, a former hooker turned straight; two old and entertaining drunks in the bar where Angie works; Joanna's indomitable mother, who has a secret of her own; and more.

This is the 5th in the Joanna Brady series, and the first I have read. It stands alone beautifully, but got me so hooked that I must get my hands on the next book immediately! Highly recommended for mystery lovers looking for a good, strong, read.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: One of the best in this series
Review: Joanna Brady seems more decisive and more skilled in her job as sheriff of Cochise Country, Arizona, in this installment of the series. Her co-workers still doubt her ability at times, but her straightforward approach and honesty seem to be winning them over. In this book, a young teenager, Bree O'Brien, is brutally murdered on the way to a rendezvous with her secret lover, Ignacio Yberra. Her father, who harbors a prejudice against Mexicans, immediately blames Ignacio. Mr. O'Brien is a wealthy and influential man who counts the Governor as a close friend, so Joanna has to approach the case in a careful and discreet manner. She decides to treat it as any other case, and is criticized by a local reporter for not giving it a higher priority. At the same time she is drawn into a case where illegal Freon from Mexico is being smuggled into Arizona. Eventually these two cases prove to have some common threads. On the home front, Joanna's daughter Jenny goes off to camp for the first time, with the usual angst on the part of both mother and daughter. Joanna's mother Eleanor pulls a very surprising move which leaves her a bit bewildered. I would recommend this book for anyone who enjoys a good mystery with a look into the personal life of the heroine.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: One of the best in this series
Review: Joanna Brady seems more decisive and more skilled in her job as sheriff of Cochise Country, Arizona, in this installment of the series. Her co-workers still doubt her ability at times, but her straightforward approach and honesty seem to be winning them over. In this book, a young teenager, Bree O'Brien, is brutally murdered on the way to a rendezvous with her secret lover, Ignacio Yberra. Her father, who harbors a prejudice against Mexicans, immediately blames Ignacio. Mr. O'Brien is a wealthy and influential man who counts the Governor as a close friend, so Joanna has to approach the case in a careful and discreet manner. She decides to treat it as any other case, and is criticized by a local reporter for not giving it a higher priority. At the same time she is drawn into a case where illegal Freon from Mexico is being smuggled into Arizona. Eventually these two cases prove to have some common threads. On the home front, Joanna's daughter Jenny goes off to camp for the first time, with the usual angst on the part of both mother and daughter. Joanna's mother Eleanor pulls a very surprising move which leaves her a bit bewildered. I would recommend this book for anyone who enjoys a good mystery with a look into the personal life of the heroine.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: The Joanna Brady books are fun to read.
Review: Once I finish one of these books I almost count the days until the new book for "next" year is published. It makes it more fun because I lived in Tucson 9 years and know all the places she writes about in her books! It makes me miss Tucson!

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Please put all JA Jance books in LARGE PRINT !
Review: Thank you for finally publishing one of Jance's books in large print. I hope you do all of them. I am visually impaired and have to use a magnifying glass for the the regular print. I know you have audio versions but it's just not the same as reading.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: One fine series that started out great&keeps getting better
Review: What began as a simple teenage disappearance has turned ugly with the discovery of the murdered corpse of Bree O'Brien. Cochise County, Arizona Sheriff Joanna Brady begins to investigate the killing of the high school valedictorian. The victim's wealthy parents insist that their daughter's boy friend, Ignacio Ybarra is the killer. Joanna quickly learns that Bree's father despises anyone of Hispanic dissent, forcing his daughter to clandestinely meet with Ignacio, who is quickly proved innocent of any wrong doing.

As Joanna continues to find clues, the case seems to get more complicated rather than closer to being solved. Joanna begins to wonder whether the illegal smuggling of freon across the border might be linked to the murder. Eventually all roads lead to one place: the O'Briens. Did they murder their own daughter to maintain a lavish lifestyle that apparently is supported by illegal means? If it is true that they murdered their own daughter, will they not be willing to eliminate an obstinate law enforcement official before she uncovers the truth? If they did not do it, Joanna must return to square one wondering who did and why?

The who-done-it is exciting and fun, but that is not what makes SKELETON CANYON and the previous four Joanna Brady mysteries a wondrous reading experience. It is Joanna, a lonely person, who has dedicated her life to her deceased spouse and J.A. Jance's brilliant depiction of Arizona (including the environment, the climate, and the racial relationships). This is one series that seems to be getting better as each new tale refreshes the entire collection.

Harriet Klausner

Rating: 3 stars
Summary: Consider buying in Hardcover. Outstanding!
Review: You may wish to buy this one in the hardcover. Probably the best of Jance's work. Outstanding story as well as an amazing description of the American Southwest.


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