What do You think about Till The Butchers Cut Him Down (1995)?
I had a hard time getting into story. The main reason was the character who was the focus of the story was annoying and obnoxious, which made it hard to understand why Sharon would try to solve his problem.The first half of the story seemed to drag but picked up beyond that point. By then I had figured out who was behind the attacks on Sharon’s client, although I hadn’t caught all the little details.This series will never be at the top of my ‘must read’ list but the books are good enough that I will continue to read them.
—Quillracer
Lots of amusing stuff in this one. Muller gives us a San Francisco setting with excursions up the coast (Mendo, Garberville, Elk, et al) and out to Nevada and American Rust Pennsylvania. PI Sharon McCone makes a formidable opponent for the bad guys, being a smart, tough woman who can play hardball with anyone. Her romantic life is less believable, consisting mainly of anattraction for an absentee lover named (of all things) Hy, who is always flying around without notice or explanation. He does put in a couple of fortuitous appearances to lend her a car when she needs one and to bounce ideas off of when she has no one else to talk to. There are a lot scruples conflicts here, too, moral compromises, that make the reader, perhaps a bit uncomfortable. The copyright date is 1994, so no one has cell phones (she does have a car phone, which she has a hard time using.) which helps create communication complications that don’t exist now. Faxes come in on thermal paper and are all curly and blurry. Anyhow, Till the Butchers Cut Him Down was an amusing excursion, and I’m off into something else.
—Carl Brush
Marcia Muller's hard-boiled PI Sharon McCone could easily have lunch with Dashiell Hammett's Sam Spade. In this outing, she is mulling over a marriage proposal when a friend from her past (they had a one-night stand while in college)asks her to help him. He was shiftless and irresponsible in college, so McCone is surprised to discover that he's become a 'fixer' of sorts; he goes in and restructures corporations to make them profitable again. However, mysterious accidents have him convinced that someone is trying to kill him. There are a few red herrings but Muller moves the plot along as swiftly as a current, and the pacing and characters are realistic and well-drawn. I will definitely be reading more of her McCone series in the future.
—Barbara