SummaryIn her first book, Deadly Nightshade, Cynthia Riggs
introduced us to one of fictions's most delightful and
most realistic amateur detectives. Victoria Trumbull is a
feisty ninety-two-year-old who refuses to let the aches
and pains of age stop her from enjoying her multifarious
activities.
A native of Massachusetts island called Martha's Vineyard,
whose ancestors sailed from its shores generations back,
Victoria knows more about the island, its people and its
history than anyone else living. This knowledge has
helped her solve one murder and earn her own baseball cap
emblazoned with "West Tisbury Police Deputy" and the job
that goes with it.
Phoebe Eldridge, a short-tempered woman who lives alone,
has sold the family land to a developer who made an offer
that seemed too good to resist. She never planned to
leave it to her only relativesa granddaughter she
dislikes intensely and a son who disappeared some years
ago, and whose name she won't even mention.
The Conservation Trust enlists Victoria to search that
land for an endangered plant, any endangered plant,
because the state prohibits bulldozing rare-plant
habitats. Victoria is delighted to add another purpose to
her daily walks. With an eleven-year-old after-school
assistant, and with the "endangered" list in hand, she
begins her search. Her first find, though, is the body of
one Montgomery Mausz, the developer's rather dubious
attorney.
Victoria is also rewarded, however, by the discovery of a
little nest of cranefly orchids. In the course of this
botanical detection, Victoria and her assistant are
treated to adventures that delight the ninety-two-year-old
as much as the preteen, even though they both get more
scares than they bargained for. Additional InformationFirst Time in Paperback
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