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Front Page Murder

ebook
4 of 4 copies available
4 of 4 copies available
In this World War II-era historical mystery series debut by Joyce St. Anthony, small-town editor Irene Ingram has a nose for news and an eye for clues.
Irene Ingram has written for her father’s newspaper, the Progress Herald, ever since she could grasp a pencil. Now she’s editor in chief, which doesn’t sit well with the men in the newsroom. But proving her journalistic bona fides is the least of Irene’s worries when crime reporter Moe Bauer, on the heels of a hot tip, turns up dead at the foot of his cellar stairs.
 
An accident? That’s what Police Chief Walt Turner thinks, and Irene is inclined to agree until she finds the note Moe discreetly left on her desk. He was on to a big story, he wrote. The robbery she’d assigned him to cover at Markowicz Hardware turned out to be something far more devious. A Jewish store owner in a small, provincial town, Sam Markowicz received a terrifying message from a stranger. Moe suspected that Sam is being threatened not only for who he is…but for what he knows.
 
Tenacious Irene senses there’s more to the Markowicz story, which she is all but certain led to Moe’s murder. When she’s not filling up column inches with the usual small-town fare—locals in uniform, victory gardens, and scrap drives—she and her best friend, scrappy secretary Peggy Reardon, search for clues. If they can find the killer, it’ll be a scoop to stop the presses. But if they can’t, Irene and Peggy may face an all-too-literal deadline.
 
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    • Kirkus

      January 1, 2022
      A newly appointed editor gets little respect but plenty of action in this World War II mystery set in small-town Pennsylvania. Irene Ingram may be young and female, but she learned all about running the Progress Herald from her father, Pete, who left her in charge after signing up as a war correspondent. Even so, her best reporter, Moe Bauer, often ignores her orders, especially when he's hot on a story. Soon after he takes off to check out a tip about a robbery at Sam Markowicz's hardware store, Moe is found dead at the bottom of his own cellar stairs. Police Chief Walter Turner, the future father-in-law who tends to ignore Irene's input, does tell her that Markowicz is a Jew who escaped Germany and that the robbery was really an antisemitic attack. Among the many people recently come to town to work at the Tabor Ironworks, which makes parts for the war effort, is one who's boarding at the home of Irene's mother. Glamorous Katherine Morningside's claim to be a singer who knows Frank Sinatra makes Irene doubt her veracity. Meanwhile, the mystery deepens when a Jewish janitor friend of Sam's who works at Tabor's gets beaten but refuses to talk to the police. Although Chief Turner calls Moe's death an accident, Irene suspects that he was murdered because of something he discovered about the ironworks. She gets to work tracking down clues and does such a good job that she's soon in the killer's sights. A gutsy and likable sleuth enlivens a debut replete with historical touches.

      COPYRIGHT(2022) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

    • Publisher's Weekly

      January 17, 2022
      Set in 1942, this entertaining series launch from St. Anthony (the Brewing Trouble mysteries) introduces Irene Ingram, the editor-in-chief of a newspaper in Progress, Pa., a job she took over from her father after he left for the Pacific to be a war correspondent. When beauty shop owner Ava Dempsey phones Irene to say Sam Markowicz’s hardware store across the street has just been robbed, Irene sends reporter Moe Bauer to investigate. Irene later learns that the hardware store wasn’t robbed, but someone did leave an anti-Semitic message for Sam, a Jewish refugee from Nazi Germany, written on a piece of cardboard. When Moe fails to show up to interview either Ava or Sam, Irene goes to Moe’s house, where she finds him dead at the foot of his cellar stairs. What appears to be an accident turns into a murder case. St. Anthony splendidly evokes the era through such details as the town’s victory garden and Woolworth’s lunch counter as she highlights the impact of the war on traditional women’s roles. Fans of Jacqueline Winspear will want to see more of the talented and intelligent Irene. Agent: Melissa Jeglinski, Knight Agency.

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