Monday, September 07, 2009


Whiskey and water by Nina Wright

In ten words or less: Whacky dogs and townsfolk complicate Whiskey's life.

Review: Real estate agent Whiskey Mattimoe's life is spinning out of control. Her incorragible Afghan hound Abra is causing trouble among the other residents of this small, upscale Michigan resort town. Three men are interested in her--newcomer MacArthur, a hunky Scotsman and potential new employee, self-help author Fenton Flagg, and her ex-husband Jeb Halloran, a musician who woos her by playing covers of Barenaked Ladies' songs.
When a young tenant of Whiskey's is found dead on the beach, everyone presumes she was caught in a riptide. But what happened to the small children she was caring for?
The book is crammed full of whacky characters--a mayor returned from the dead, a computer guru who controls a vast financial empire, a pack of neurotic dogs, an oldeer-than-his-years middle schooler, and more.

Why bother? Whiskey is an incompetant pet owner and a neglectful step-parent. All the eccentric characters are hard to keep straight, and the plot gets lost along the way. I assume the dogs' and kids trials were meant to be funny, but they were just sad.

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