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| A Walk Through the Fire (Sharon McCone) (Sharon McCone) | 
enlarge | Author: Marcia Muller Creator: Joyce Bean Publisher: Brilliance Audio on MP3-CD Category: Book
List Price: $24.95 Buy New: $15.36 You Save: $9.59 (38%)
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Avg. Customer Rating: 23 reviews Sales Rank: 2626625
Format: Audiobook, Mp3 Audio, Unabridged Media: Audio CD Edition: MP3 Una Number Of Items: 1 Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.3 Dimensions (in): 7.5 x 5.3 x 0.6
ISBN: 1423354079 Dewey Decimal Number: 813.54 EAN: 9781423354079 ASIN: 1423354079
Publication Date: May 2, 2008 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
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Product Description P.I. Sharon McCone is sick and tired of San Francisco's persistent rainy weather, so she jumps at the chance to investigate the sabotage of a movie being filmed on the Hawaiian island of Kauai. The documentary is based on the writings of Elson Wellbright, a descendant of a missionary family and scholar of Hawaiian culture and history. Wellbright's son is bankrolling the project and has angered many members of the family, who aren't anxious for the film to be completed. Soon the sabotage escalates into violence and the matriarch of the Wellbright family falls to her death during a shoot on a clifftop. McCone's investigation takes her into a world of family secrets, drug dealing, political insurgency, and murder.
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| Customer Reviews: Read 18 more reviews...
Muller trips in time warp & emerges as a gothic romancer! June 28, 1999 15 out of 19 found this review helpful
What on earth happened here?! One of my favorite writers, Marcia Muller, has converted one of my favorite characters, Sharon McCone, into some sort of lame-brained "damsel" victimized by her lusting hormones, conniving acquaintances, and short-circuited brain cells. I grew up reading way too much of this genre -- the "Gothic romance mystery" of the '60s & '70s was vacuous and insulting to the reader's intelligence then and this book proves it still is! Most readers will have figured out more than half the "mystery" before they've read half the book; but reading isn't really necessary or desirable. This book is perfect for the Summer Beach Reading category, the type you can just skim and not miss a thing in doing so.Please, Marcia, promise us this McCone entry was just a brief summertime aberration and that you'll be bringing back the intelligent, independent and forthright Sharon we all know in your next book. I promise not to give up on you just because of this one disappointment!
Muller is fantastic! August 27, 2000 7 out of 8 found this review helpful
I have read all of Marcia Muller's books and this one was one of the best. I am never disappointed but A Walk Through Fire kept me on the edge of my seat. I sent this one to my sister and now she is a Muller fan. Sharon McCone is a great character and just grows better and better with each new book. I love the way Muller takes us through McCone's changes in lifestyles and boyfriends. I almost feel like I know this woman and could call on her to help me in any situation. She is not as flippant as Grafton but I can hardly bear to put the books down to go to sleep or to work. Muller is one of the best writer's of the mystery/private eye genre that I have come across and I have read quite a lot. This one was all the better because it took us out of the usual setting of San Francisco to Hawaii. Love it!
A Slightly Different Sharon McCone Mystery....... March 1, 2000 5 out of 6 found this review helpful
Some Sharon McCone readers may be put off by the plot for this book. Set in Hiawaii, it has many elements not commonly found in the McCone series. The storyline somehow manages to become McCone, herself, since many readers will figure out the ending before they reach it. The book does introduces the reader to some interesting characters. As McCone romantically teeters back and forth, fans will be tempted to pull for one suitor over the other. I found the author's different approach to this book a good read once I decided I liked the plot. I am glad things ended the way they did. Like McCone, I hate things left unresolved.
Not the best, but enjoyable July 19, 1999 4 out of 8 found this review helpful
I wait and I wait and then it arrives. Usually I plunge right in and read a new Muller the day I get it. I tried, but this one is a disappoinment. I did get it done quickly, but it was more of a challenge than usual. I have many friends who wait for my books and I owe it to them to get them done in a timely fashion. Perhpas I am prejudiced. I find that many of the authors whom I enjoy are a disappoint when they go outside their general geographic area. This has happened time and time again. Please return to California and leave Hawaii to other authors.Again, read this because it continues the story line and is enjoyable, but not up to the usual standards.
McCone successfully does Hawaii April 13, 1999 4 out of 6 found this review helpful
San Francisco-based filmmaker Glenna Stanleigh is in Kauai shooting a documentary involving island legends and myths in accordance with the works of Elson Wellbright. Elson's son Peter is Glenna's partner on the film. However, accidents have plagued the set. Glenna asks private investigator Sharon McCone to fly in from California to investigate the strange happenings. Though she is not licensed to practice in Hawaii, Sharon sees the trip as a combination vacation-business outing and accepts. Her lover Hy Ripinsky accompanies her, which allows Sharon to use his company's security assets already located on the islands. Even as she falls in love with Kauai, Sharon begins her inquiries, not yet realizing the danger she now must face. The Sharon McCone mysteries have been a fan favorite for many years. Her twentieth tale, A WALK THROUGH THE FIRE, is a very fresh who-done-it that invigorates Sharon and her audience. The change of location provides Marcia Muller the opportunity to sprinkle her novel with Island magic as well as native resentment to the influx of outsiders. Ms. Muller is at the of her top game, which is somewhere in the stratosphere, with this marvelous mystery. Harriet Klausner
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