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The Face on the Wall: A Homer Kelly Mystery (Homer Kelly Mysteries)
 
 
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The Face on the Wall: A Homer Kelly Mystery (Homer Kelly Mysteries) [Paperback]

Jane Langton
4.5 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)

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Product details

  • Paperback: 304 pages
  • Publisher: Penguin Books Australia; Reprint edition (24 Jun 1999)
  • Language English
  • ISBN-10: 0140281576
  • ISBN-13: 978-0140281576
  • Product Dimensions: 17 x 10.4 x 1.8 cm
  • Average Customer Review: 4.5 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Bestsellers Rank: 2,572,223 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

More About the Author

Jane Langton
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Product Description

Synopsis

No matter how many times she erases it, a mysterious, eerie face keeps appearing on her mural wall, and when her tenant's eight-year-old retarded son is found dead in front of it Annie calls in her uncle Homer to investigate. Reprint.

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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
2 of 2 people found the following review helpful
By Donald Mitchell HALL OF FAME TOP 500 REVIEWER VINE™ VOICE
Format:Paperback
Caution: This book deals with some pretty ugly subjects including spousal and child abuse, and contains much coarse and foul language. The crimes are pretty graphically described, which may also make this book a little too gritty for sensitive readers. As a movie, this material would definitely earn the book an R rating.

The Face on the Wall is the most subtle and rewarding Homer and Mary Kelly story in many years. I particularly liked the build up of suspense and tension as one calamity after another befalls children's book illustrator, Annie Swann, who is the Kelly's niece (on Mary's side of the family). Usually, the sense of drama in Ms. Langton's work is not nearly so palpable.

The plot is much more complicated than usual, and intelligently involves a large number of interesting characters. As a result, the action moves along faster and in more interesting ways than we have come to expect from Ms. Langton's fiction.

The book's major theme is about the vulnerabilities of innocence and goodness to those who are determined to do whatever it takes to succeed. In fact, the whole story can be read almost as though it is a morality play from the Middle Ages.

As you may know, Ms. Langton likes to let her readers in on who the murderer is early on. So the mystery is often mostly of how the mystery will be solved or the misdirection overcome. In this book, there are many more mysteries that do not necessarily match up with murder.

The book builds upon an opening in which Annie Swann is at the acme of her life. She has fame, fortune, talent, and rewarding work. Like many artists, she has conceived of a great masterpiece, a mural on the interior wall of a new wing she has built on her house. Obsessed with her creation, she finds herself pulled away from her goal by mysterious occurrences involving Eddy Gast, an 8 year-old boy with fine artistic talent who was born with Down's syndrome, and the unexplained appearances of menacing faces in her mural. Like an unstable scaffolding, the pieces of this self-perceived perfection suddenly begin to disintegrate around her.

After finishing this book, think about those you know who are most popular. Why do you think they are popular? Do they ever misuse this popularity? Have you ever misused your popularity? How can we help those who are popular to play a more positive role?

Seek first to do the right thing!

Comment | 
Was this review helpful to you?
2 of 3 people found the following review helpful
By A Customer
Format:Hardcover
Renowned children's book illustrator, Annie Swann, has just added an addition to her home. The new area includes a wall mural that allows Annie to paint characters from children's stories on it. The new addition allows Annie to supplement her income by renting out the old section of her home to the opportunist Gast family.

As she begins to paint the mural, two things occur. On the wall, a frightening face appears everyday that Annie cannot eradicate. Eddy Gast, a Down syndrome child mysteriously dies at the base of the mural. The Gasts quickly starts to sue their landlord for negligence and wrongful death. Annie turns to her Uncle Homer and Aunt Mary to prove her innocence and to learn why the visage keeps appearing on the wall.

Thirteen is a lucky number for fans of New England cozies as the marvelous Homer and Mary Kelly mysteries obtain that number with one of its best entries ever. THE FACE ON THE WALL is a very exciting novel due to its brilliant characterizations. Annie, her sleuthing relatives, and her paramour are all wonderful characters, while the villainous Gast family comprise some of the nastiest and vilest villains to reside in a cozy. This is one series that is well worth obtaining the back issues to read because the entire collection is fun, refreshing, and great to read.

Harriet Klausner

Comment | 
Was this review helpful to you?
Most Helpful Customer Reviews on Amazon.com (beta)
Amazon.com:  6 reviews
5 of 5 people found the following review helpful
Living with Nightmares and Villains 19 Oct 2001
By Donald Mitchell - Published on Amazon.com
Format:Paperback
Caution: This book deals with some pretty ugly subjects including spousal and child abuse, and contains much coarse and foul language. The crimes are pretty graphically described, which may also make this book a little too gritty for sensitive readers. As a movie, this material would definitely earn the book an R rating.

The Face on the Wall is the most subtle and rewarding Homer and Mary Kelly story in many years. I particularly liked the build up of suspense and tension as one calamity after another befalls children's book illustrator, Annie Swann, who is the Kelly's niece (on Mary's side of the family). Usually, the sense of drama in Ms. Langton's work is not nearly so palpable.

The plot is much more complicated than usual, and intelligently involves a large number of interesting characters. As a result, the action moves along faster and in more interesting ways than we have come to expect from Ms. Langton's fiction.

The book's major theme is about the vulnerabilities of innocence and goodness to those who are determined to do whatever it takes to succeed. In fact, the whole story can be read almost as though it is a morality play from the Middle Ages.

As you may know, Ms. Langton likes to let her readers in on who the murderer is early on. So the mystery is often mostly of how the mystery will be solved or the misdirection overcome. In this book, there are many more mysteries that do not necessarily match up with murder.

The book builds upon an opening in which Annie Swann is at the acme of her life. She has fame, fortune, talent, and rewarding work. Like many artists, she has conceived of a great masterpiece, a mural on the interior wall of a new wing she has built on her house. Obsessed with her creation, she finds herself pulled away from her goal by mysterious occurrences involving Eddy Gast, an 8 year-old boy with fine artistic talent who was born with Down's syndrome, and the unexplained appearances of menacing faces in her mural. Like an unstable scaffolding, the pieces of this self-perceived perfection suddenly begin to disintegrate around her.

After finishing this book, think about those you know who are most popular. Why do you think they are popular? Do they ever misuse this popularity? Have you ever misused your popularity? How can we help those who are popular to play a more positive role?

Seek first to do the right thing!

4 of 4 people found the following review helpful
delightfully refreshing,sur to garner author more fans 16 April 1998
By A Customer - Published on Amazon.com
Format:Hardcover
Renowned children's book illustrator, Annie Swann, has just added an addition to her home. The new area includes a wall mural that allows Annie to paint characters from children's stories on it. The new addition allows Annie to supplement her income by renting out the old section of her home to the opportunist Gast family.

As she begins to paint the mural, two things occur. On the wall, a frightening face appears everyday that Annie cannot eradicate. Eddy Gast, a Down syndrome child mysteriously dies at the base of the mural. The Gasts quickly starts to sue their landlord for negligence and wrongful death. Annie turns to her Uncle Homer and Aunt Mary to prove her innocence and to learn why the visage keeps appearing on the wall.

Thirteen is a lucky number for fans of New England cozies as the marvelous Homer and Mary Kelly mysteries obtain that number with one of its best entries ever. THE FACE ON THE WALL is a very exciting novel due to its brilliant characterizations. Annie, her sleuthing relatives, and her paramour are all wonderful characters, while the villainous Gast family comprise some of the nastiest and vilest villains to reside in a cozy. This is one series that is well worth obtaining the back issues to read because the entire collection is fun, refreshing, and great to read.

Harriet Klausner

2 of 2 people found the following review helpful
Always Enjoyable 16 April 2003
By Louis M. Perdue - Published on Amazon.com
Format:Paperback
What an amazing author Jane Langton is. One of the blurbs on my edition of this book states, "Today's best American mystery writer." I usually take such things as hyperbole but in this case, the reviewer may be right as I would certainly place Ms. Langton in the top three along with Elizabeth George and Elizabeth Peters. In this entry, Homer and Mary are helping with two mysteries, one involving an old student of Mary's and the other involving Mary's niece Anna who has just built a new house. Of course, the two different mysteries become one eventually. As always, the antics of Homer are fun to read and how Mary puts up with him, I will never figure out. I have read all but one of the Homer & Mary mysteries and am trying to find a copy of the one I have not read. I would recommend starting with this series from as close to the beginning as you can as the progression of the relationship between the two main characters is important.
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