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Cape Perdido [Mass Market Paperback]

Marcia Muller
3.5 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)

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Product details

  • Mass Market Paperback: 336 pages
  • Publisher: Little, Brown & Company; New edition edition (7 Sep 2006)
  • Language English
  • ISBN-10: 0446614998
  • ISBN-13: 978-0446614993
  • Product Dimensions: 10.5 x 2.2 x 17.1 cm
  • Average Customer Review: 3.5 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Bestsellers Rank: 1,441,253 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Marcia Muller
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Product Description

Review

"Dark and brooding whodunit...well-hammered tale."

Product Description

At the northernmost point of Soledad County. California, lies Cape Perdido - once a thriving lumber town, now a getaway for tourists and outdoor recreationists. But when the water harvesting plans of a North Carolina company threaten the residents' livelihoods, four people get caught up in the fight to save the town in very different ways: jessie Domingo, a community liaison specialist from a New York ecological consultancy; Joseph Openshaw, a respected environmentalist, whose return to the Cape after 20 years forces him to face ghosts from his past; Steph Pace, a restauranteur and Openshaw's former love, who must confront the same ghosts and Timothy McNear, a former lumber mill owner who harbors secrets of his own. The arrival of the 'waterbaggers' will drive otherwise peaceful people to desperate acts and a dramatic series of events that will awaken the residents of Cape Perdidoto unsavoury truths about their town - an each other.

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Customer Reviews

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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
3 of 4 people found the following review helpful
By Donald Mitchell HALL OF FAME TOP 500 REVIEWER VINE™ VOICE
Format:Hardcover
Cape Perdido is an interesting variation on a familiar mystery theme -- the lone detective against the town and its secrets. In Cape Perdido, a small town's residents find their livelihoods at risk when an out-of-state firm bids to drain the Perdido River and ship the water off to Southern California in large water bags. What little money comes into the town is from tourists . . . who are drawn by the river and the nearby shore.

It's the 11th hour and New York consultants have been brought in to organize a defense by building on the local resistance efforts. But the consultants don't seem to be on the same page. The local resisters are also in conflict with one another. What they have in common is a disregard for Timothy McNear who is facilitating the water grab . . . after having shut down the town's mill just a few years earlier. But McNear and several of the resisters seem to have a hidden mystery in common. What are they hiding?

As the story evolves, you will find yourself puzzled by what's going on and why . . . but not any more puzzled than any of several of the characters are. Ms. Muller provides a variety of narrators and points of view to show just how confusing the situation really is. She holds the key back until right before the end . . . in a telltale clue that suddenly ties all the ribbons together.

For me, the book worked quite well as a story and as a mystery. My main complaint against the book was that I didn't find myself feeling very sympathetic to any of the characters until near the end. Without that sympathetic connection, the plot details remained details . . . rather than a compelling story that required resolution for the "good" guys and gals.

You would think that a story about a corporation wanting to steal water rights would create automatic sympathy towards those who would lose benefits from having the water. It probably says more about how unsympathetic these characters are to say that such opposition didn't automatically make the potential "victims" attractive.

I am a fan of the Sharon McCone novels but find that Ms. Muller has painted herself into a story line that involves too many characters to be easy to enjoy. I'm sure she relishes operating with more freedom, and I think she used that unaccustomed freedom well in Cape Perdido. If she had created some more sympathetic characters, I would have delighted in the book.

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A fair mystery 14 Oct 2006
By Wendy Jones TOP 1000 REVIEWER VINE™ VOICE
Format:Mass Market Paperback
Although I enjoyed this book, I would not say it was the best mystery I have ever read. The plot is good and the tension is held, but I agree with the other reviewer that it is difficult to identify with the main characters, who all seem a bit selfish. There is also a "secret" which is held throughout the book, but this proves to be more irritating than gripping. That said, the book is well written, the plot kept me interested and I certainly did not guess the ending, which was in no way predictable. Marcia Muller is a good writer, but unfortunately this is not one of her best. Still, I would say it is still worth reading.
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews on Amazon.com (beta)
Amazon.com:  15 reviews
9 of 9 people found the following review helpful
Maybe it's just me, but this wasn't a pageturner 3 Oct 2005
By M. C. Crammer - Published on Amazon.com
Format:Hardcover
I liked this book less than others I've read by Marcia Muller, which have been in the Sharyn McCone series. I suspect that the missing McCone accounts for some of this dissatisfaction. There's really no single person who is the detective in this book -- rather, the story focuses on a half-dozen people in short chapters, which have the name of the character at the top of each chapter.

I never really engaged with anyone in the book, either positively or negatively, but the plotting and writing were fairly good.

The story involves a conflict in Northern California over water rights to a river. A megacorporation is trying to get permission to pump the river water into a very large bag and tow the bag to southern California, which needs water. The locals think syphoning off the water will ruin the environment, not to mention the tourist trade on which their economy depends. I kept waiting for someone to get killed, chapter after chapter, so I'd get to the usual murder mystery, but it's not that kind of book (although there is a murder in it).
5 of 5 people found the following review helpful
A Town Threatened by an Old Secret and a Water Grab 2 Aug 2005
By Professor Donald Mitchell - Published on Amazon.com
Format:Hardcover
Cape Perdido is an interesting variation on a familiar mystery theme -- the lone detective against the town and its secrets. In Cape Perdido, a small town's residents find their livelihoods at risk when an out-of-state firm bids to drain the Perdido River and ship the water off to Southern California in large water bags. What little money comes into the town is from tourists . . . who are drawn by the river and the nearby shore.

It's the 11th hour and New York consultants have been brought in to organize a defense by building on the local resistance efforts. But the consultants don't seem to be on the same page. The local resisters are also in conflict with one another. What they have in common is a disregard for Timothy McNear who is facilitating the water grab . . . after having shut down the town's mill just a few years earlier. But McNear and several of the resisters seem to have a hidden mystery in common. What are they hiding?

As the story evolves, you will find yourself puzzled by what's going on and why . . . but not any more puzzled than any of several of the characters are. Ms. Muller provides a variety of narrators and points of view to show just how confusing the situation really is. She holds the key back until right before the end . . . in a telltale clue that suddenly ties all the ribbons together.

For me, the book worked quite well as a story and as a mystery. My main complaint against the book was that I didn't find myself feeling very sympathetic to any of the characters until near the end. Without that sympathetic connection, the plot details remained details . . . rather than a compelling story that required resolution for the "good" guys and gals.

You would think that a story about a corporation wanting to steal water rights would create automatic sympathy towards those who would lose benefits from having the water. It probably says more about how unsympathetic these characters are to say that such opposition didn't automatically make the potential "victims" attractive.

I am a fan of the Sharon McCone novels but find that Ms. Muller has painted herself into a story line that involves too many characters to be easy to enjoy. I'm sure she relishes operating with more freedom, and I think she used that unaccustomed freedom well in Cape Perdido. If she had created some more sympathetic characters, I would have delighted in the book.
3 of 3 people found the following review helpful
Mueller's not-so-good is still pretty good!! 28 Aug 2005
By schnauzerlady - Published on Amazon.com
Format:Hardcover
As always, the environmental plot is of immediate concern and well researched - the technical points of the actual narrative get a bit tiresome though, with the abrupt, shifting points of view making it difficult to feel very sympathetic about the many characters we're introduced to. Not one of Ms. Mueller's best by any means, but a quick, enjoyable read and still better than your average off-the-rack fiction - the ending is a neat twist that makes the book satisfying.
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