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Wollie Shelley--the endearing, idiosyncratic heroine of the
award-winning "Dating Dead Men, Dating Is Murder, "and "A Date You
Can't Refuse"--returns in a funny murder mystery set in the world
of television soaps.
When David Zetrakis, the producer of a popular soap opera, is found
shot to death the day after Christmas, Wollie Shelley finds herself
caught up in the murder investigation. Zetrakis was one of the many
Mr. Wrongs in Wollie's career as a serial dater, and her friend
Joey has emerged as the media's prime suspect. A hot-tempered
celebrity who had dated Zetrakis and was fired from his show some
years ago, Joey has inherited a million-dollar Klimt from him. But
Joey is not the only potential suspect. Zetrakis left lots of nice
bequests to the cast and crew of the show. And as the dating
correspondent on a talk show called "SoapDirt, " Wollie, who's
required to dine and dish with the stars, quickly discovers that
the behind-the-scenes intrigues of television soaps are as highly
charged as the on-screen shenanigans.
When Wollie is not trying to protect Joey from an onslaught of
predatory reporters, she's helping her brother make the transition
from a mental hospital to a halfway house and negotiating her
relationship with Simon, her FBI-agent boyfriend. "Dead Ex "is
another full-out romp of a mystery sure to please Kozak's many
fans--and win her many new ones, too.
Wollie Shelley, the plucky amateur sleuth "Kirkus Reviews" called
"funny, brave, smart, and altogether the fetchingest crime heroine
since the early Stephanie Plum," returns to face suspect lovers and
unlovable suspects in this hilarious sequel to "Dating Dead Men."
Wollie Shelley is a greeting card artist struggling to keep afloat
financially and to pursue--despite a series of recent
disasters--the search for the love of her life. She reluctantly
agrees to be a contestant on the reality television show
"Biological Clock." The show's premise: Six eligible singles date
each other, and the audience votes on which couple would make the
best parents. Alas, Wollie isn't having much luck finding a man
she'd like to date "off the air," much less father her child. As
her own biological clock ticks away, Wollie gets caught up in a
much more pressing demand on her time. Her friend Annika has
vanished into thin air, and Wollie is convinced that she's in grave
danger.
When Wollie reports the disappearance to the Los Angeles Police
Department, however, the detective assigned to the case seems more
interested in dating Wollie than in finding her friend. So Wollie
springs into action--and lands right in the middle of an FBI
investigation into an international drug cartel. She soon finds
herself being stalked by an assortment of threatening characters,
including her fellow television" "contestants, who will stop at
nothing to beat the clock.
With "Dating Is Murder," Kozak delivers another sparkling treasure,
a laugh-out-loud-funny, literate mystery for readers of Janet
Evanovich and Sue Grafton and for Kozak's own growing legion of
fans.
Los Angeles greeting-card artist Wollie Shelley is dating forty men
in sixty days as research for a radio talk show host's upcoming
book, "How to Avoid Getting Dumped All the Time." Wollie is meeting
plenty of eligible bachelors but not falling in love, not until she
stumbles over a dead body en route to Rio Pescado--a state-run
mental hospital--and is momentarily taken hostage by a charismatic
"doctor" who is on the run from the Mob. Wollie fears that her
beloved brother, a paranoid schizophrenic living at Rio Pescado, is
involved in the murder, so rather than go to the authorities, she
decides to solve the crime on her own. As she meets up with an
array of small-time crooks and swaggering mobsters only slightly
more sinister than the men she's been dating, Wollie realizes that
"getting dumped" is the least of her problems. Finding true love,
she discovers, sometimes means learning how to avoid getting killed
. . .
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