Outwitting trolls: a Brady Coyne novel

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English

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Brady Coyne is a Boston attorney who focuses on a few private clients and the legal drudgery of their everyday life, which leads to a generally unexciting life. Brady, however, gets a call from an old friend and former neighbor—a man from his past as a happily married man. When Brady was married and living in suburbia, Ken Nichols was his happily married neighbor. Both marriages fell apart years ago and Brady moved to Boston while Ken Nichols moved to Baltimore. Now a decade later and in Boston for a conference, Ken contacts Brady for a get-together and a drink. It’s an uneventful evening but the next day Brady gets a call from Nichols’ ex-wife. She’s standing in her ex’s hotel room, Nichols is lying dead on the floor of his room and she needs Brady’s help.

But this savage murder is only the first and Brady is soon trying to find the connection between these long ago friends and the savage murders dogging their family.

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ISBN
9780312531270
9781410431950

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Both series feature old fashioned lawyers who would rather play golf than do legal work. They are are engaging, funny, and just happen to get involved in solving mysteries. The plotting is fast paced with an emphasis on character development. -- Merle Jacob
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Published Reviews

Booklist Review

The late Tapply completed one last Brady Coyne novel before he died in 2009, and it's a fitting finale to a fine series. As happens regularly, Boston lawyer Coyne is torn away from the comfortable routine of his easygoing practice by a friend in trouble. This time it's the wife of a former neighbor, who calls Brady from a suburban hotel, where she is standing beside the body of her ex-husband, whom Brady had met the previous night for a drink. The police are interested in the wife, but Brady is convinced the murder has something to do with the couple's disaffected children. The plot unwinds smoothly, but as always, what holds readers is Brady himself the quintessential regular guy as sleuth, a man who likes his pleasures (fishing, food, the Red Sox, and the occasional beer) but whose sensitivity to human relationships hovers just below the surface of his amiable exterior. He will be sorely missed by fans of realistic crime fiction. Saying farewell to Brady Coyne is like losing a good friend.--Ott, Bill Copyright 2010 Booklist

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
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Publisher's Weekly Review

Family secrets and emotional hangups dominate the comfortably satisfying 25th and final Brady Coyne novel from Tapply (1940-2009). When Sharon Nichols finds her veterinarian ex-husband, Ken, stabbed to death in a suburban Boston hotel room, she phones Brady, a former neighbor of the couple, who rushes to the scene. As Sharon's lawyer, Brady tries to redirect police suspicion away from his client by exploring the victim's entanglement in selling date-rape drugs while juggling bad debts. To put it mildly, Brady discovers that Ken and Sharon had a less than idyllic personal life. While trying to help the emotionally fragile Sharon hold herself together, Brady must also sort out his prickly relationship with his son and cope with the moods of his own current lover. Convincing characters and a pleasant New England setting enhance a genuine play-fair mystery, despite several false leads. (Nov.) (c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
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Library Journal Review

Tapply, a prolific writer of over 40 works of fiction and nonfiction, built his reputation on his Brady Coyne mystery series. Coyne, a Boston lawyer keen on fly--fishing and the Red Sox, with an ex-wife, disaffected grown children, a trusty dog, and a string of girlfriends, now makes his final appearance. (Beginning with Death at Charity's Point, Tapply wrote over two dozen titles in this winning series before his death in 2009.) Ken Nichols, an old acquaintance in town for a convention, meets Brady for drinks and to talk over old times. Brady had provided legal services for Ken's veterinary practice, but he hadn't seen him in ten years. Their small talk is interrupted when Ken speaks with a mysterious man named Clem. Brady realizes too late that Ken's conversation might have been significant when he gets a frantic call later from Ken's ex-wife Sharon. She found Ken stabbed to death in his hotel room. Along with a crusty but dedicated homicide detective, Brady investigates false leads and shady suspects to arrive at a satisfying conclusion that hinges on the presence of a cat. VERDICT Loyal readers will find all the familiar elements Tapply has brought to the series. Essential and highly recommended.-Donna Bettencourt, Mesa Cty. P.L., Grand Junction, CO (c) Copyright 2010. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

(c) Copyright Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
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Kirkus Book Review

Another death knell for one of Boston attorney Brady Coyne's (Hell Bent,2008, etc.)old friends.It's been ten years since Bradylast saw Ken Nichols, his neighbor in Wellesley before they both got divorced. Now that Ken's in Natick for a veterinarians' convention, he's asked if they can reconnect. It's a short reunion, though, because the night after they have some drinks and catch up on old times, Ken's stabbed to death in his hotel room, his body discovered by his alluring ex-wife Sharon, with whom he'd also evidently wanted to reconnect, though in a more comprehensive way. Sharon's not exactly the ideal client. She doesn't call the police before she calls Brady, doesn't call the police after she calls Brady, and tells an improbable story about letting herself into an unlocked hotel room whose door couldn't possibly have been ajar. So naturally Det. Roger Horowitz and Det. Marcia Benetti like her for the murder. Looking further afield, Brady finds only a pair of wraithlike suspectsa fleeing figure in a hooded sweatshirt, the mysterious "Clem" Ken spoke to at the conventionand Ken's relatives, his ailing father Charles and his daughter Ellen and son Wayne, both in degree programs. Or rather he doesn't find Wayne, provoking Brady, who's having issues with his own son Billy, to something like actual engagement.Weak-tea suspects and a sleuth who's just too nice and too invested in the finer things in life to be seriously interested in detection, or indeed in the law.]] Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.
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Booklist Reviews

The late Tapply completed one last Brady Coyne novel before he died in 2009, and it's a fitting finale to a fine series. As happens regularly, Boston lawyer Coyne is torn away from the comfortable routine of his easygoing practice by a friend in trouble. This time it's the wife of a former neighbor, who calls Brady from a suburban hotel, where she is standing beside the body of her ex-husband, whom Brady had met the previous night for a drink. The police are interested in the wife, but Brady is convinced the murder has something to do with the couple's disaffected children. The plot unwinds smoothly, but as always, what holds readers is Brady himself—the quintessential regular guy as sleuth, a man who likes his pleasures (fishing, food, the Red Sox, and the occasional beer) but whose sensitivity to human relationships hovers just below the surface of his amiable exterior. He will be sorely missed by fans of realistic crime fiction. Saying farewell to Brady Coyne is like losing a good friend. Copyright 2010 Booklist Reviews.

Copyright 2010 Booklist Reviews.
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Library Journal Reviews

After Brady Coyne gets together for drinks with an old neighbor, his ex-wife calls; seems she's implicated in his murder. The final work from the author, who died in July 2009.-Barbara Hoffert Copyright 2010 Reed Business Information.

Copyright 2010 Reed Business Information.
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Library Journal Reviews

Tapply, a prolific writer of over 40 works of fiction and nonfiction, built his reputation on his Brady Coyne mystery series. Coyne, a Boston lawyer keen on fly-fishing and the Red Sox, with an ex-wife, disaffected grown children, a trusty dog, and a string of girlfriends, now makes his final appearance. (Beginning with Death at Charity's Point, Tapply wrote over two dozen titles in this winning series before his death in 2009.) Ken Nichols, an old acquaintance in town for a convention, meets Brady for drinks and to talk over old times. Brady had provided legal services for Ken's veterinary practice, but he hadn't seen him in ten years. Their small talk is interrupted when Ken speaks with a mysterious man named Clem. Brady realizes too late that Ken's conversation might have been significant when he gets a frantic call later from Ken's ex-wife Sharon. She found Ken stabbed to death in his hotel room. Along with a crusty but dedicated homicide detective, Brady investigates false leads and shady suspects to arrive at a satisfying conclusion that hinges on the presence of a cat. VERDICT Loyal readers will find all the familiar elements Tapply has brought to the series. Essential and highly recommended.—Donna Bettencourt, Mesa Cty. P.L., Grand Junction, CO

[Page 74]. (c) Copyright 2010. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

Copyright 2010. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
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Publishers Weekly Reviews

Family secrets and emotional hangups dominate the comfortably satisfying 25th and final Brady Coyne novel from Tapply (1940–2009). When Sharon Nichols finds her veterinarian ex-husband, Ken, stabbed to death in a suburban Boston hotel room, she phones Brady, a former neighbor of the couple, who rushes to the scene. As Sharon's lawyer, Brady tries to redirect police suspicion away from his client by exploring the victim's entanglement in selling date-rape drugs while juggling bad debts. To put it mildly, Brady discovers that Ken and Sharon had a less than idyllic personal life. While trying to help the emotionally fragile Sharon hold herself together, Brady must also sort out his prickly relationship with his son and cope with the moods of his own current lover. Convincing characters and a pleasant New England setting enhance a genuine play-fair mystery, despite several false leads. (Nov.)

[Page ]. Copyright 2010 Reed Business Information.

Copyright 2010 Reed Business Information.
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