Books : Dead Dry (An Em Hansen Mystery)

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Author name: Sarah Andrews

 : Dead Dry (An Em Hansen Mystery)
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Used Price: $7.22
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Type of bind: Hardcover
Dewey Decimal Number: 813.54
EAN num: 9780769649122
Format: Bargain Price
ISBN number: 0769649122
Label: St. Martin's Minotaur
Manufacturer: St. Martin's Minotaur
Quantity: 1
Page Count: 320
Printing Date: November 01, 2005
Publishing house: St. Martin's Minotaur
Release Date: October 13, 2005
Sale Popularity Level: 2364510
Studio: St. Martin's Minotaur




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Editor's Notes and Comments:

Product Description:
Sarah Andrews’ newest geological mystery finds geologist and investigator Em Hansen helping out the Salt Lake City police on the murder of a fellow geologist. Dumped in a gravel quarry, his arms and legs removed and his face bashed in so he’ll be unrecognizable, Em IDs him anyway because of a strange tattoo—a geological map of the world—she spots on his body: It’s Afton McWain, a controversial figure who worked in big oil in Colorado but who now works in the field of water and droughts.
In Andrews’ universe, things are never what they seem, and the murder may have as much to do with McWain’s personal life (his ex or his common-law wife?) or his overzealous dedication to the “green” lifestyle (the traditional neighbors of his liberal ranch)? as it does with his job. Either way, the combination of suspense and science makes this novel another winner.




Customer Reviews
User popularity level:  out of 5 stars

Rated by buyers 3 out of 5 stars - Not one of the best in this series, but readable
This Em Hanson, Utah geologist and amateur detective, mystery is a bit too much of a lecture on the geography/water issues of Colorado. The geology and water discussions were a bit interesting, but overdone. THis is a mystery, after all, not a book about the geology of Colorado. Still, I found myself yearning for Colorado as I read the book (hadn't been there in years). This book and another Colorado-setting mystery prompted me to go there for a short vacation (I just came back).

The idea that the police would have a forensic geologist and that they would want her to get involved in solving a mystery is just too ridiculous. I also thought there was way too much men-in-Em's-life- talking-about-Em. I think the author is in love with her character and has idealized her as this woman that men are longing for while she ducks a commitment. Enough already. I like some romance in a mystery, but these long sections of men analyzing Em's character should have been edited out.

The plot involves a professional acquaintance of Em who dies in the area that Em lives in (he's from Colorado, she lives in Utah). Em knows the man's wife and goes with the police to break the news etc. After that, she gets involved in solving this murder.

All in all, the author needed to spend more time (and pages) on the mystery (more twists and turns) and less on lectures on Colorado and men musing about Em.

This is not the best of the series.



Rated by buyers 2 out of 5 stars - Disappointed
I was very disappointed in the book (and this series). I thought I had found a new author to read but it turns out these are just romance novels dressed up as "mysteries". Romance readers should like them.



Rated by buyers 3 out of 5 stars - Disappointing
Really deserves a 2.5, but there's no rating for that, so I rounded up. This one was better than the frighteningly dreadful "Killer Dust" and the almost-but-not-quite-as-bad "Earth Colors". As a practicing hydrogeologist, I found the plot somewhat implausible and the science somewhat "fluffy". Like another reviewer, I also wondered why a homicide detective would drag Em along into the investigation-I also question whether or not Utah (or any other state) has a "state forensic geologist". And if they did, it would probably be someone with better qualifications than an entry level geologist with only a master's degree.

Aside from these points, the book was OK, although the characters seemed one dimensional and the plot pretty weak. Oh, and the storyline involving the ex-fiancee Ray, was very strange and didn't really seem to contribute to the plot (or anything else.



Rated by buyers 3 out of 5 stars - Andrews back to old form
In this new Em Hansen mystery, Sarah Andrews manages to recapture the charm of the earlier books in the series, and gotten past the dreadful Killer Dust. Hansen finally has a full-time job, working for the Utah Geological Survey, which adds some plausibility to her consulting work with Utah law enforcement. She is brought in when a body is found crushed at a gravel quarry, which leads Hansen and a female detective to Colorado, where a plot involving real estate development and dry wells ensues. It's still not clear why the police would want Hansen to be so intimately involved in a murder investigation, and interestingly another forensic geologist appears in this novel who does some geology that is more crucial to the investigation than anything that Hansen does. Her ex-fiancee, Ray, is back in a rather srange sub-plot. Nonetheless, the book is entertaining and does supply insights into groundwater geology. The scientifically interested reader should not put too much stock in Andrews' misleading discusion of thunderstorms, however.



Rated by buyers 4 out of 5 stars - Another wonderful read from the Em Hansen series!
Forensic geologist Em Hansen is living in Salt Lake City, Utah, and working for the Utah Geological Survey when she is called in to help with a murder. A body has been found buried in a gravel pit and a wall of gravel has fallen on it.

Unfortunately, Em recognizes a tattoo on the body (not much else is recognizable) and it is someone she knows: a well-known geologist from Colorado, Afton McWain. Em knew both Afton and his geologist wife, Julia.

Michelle Aldrich, the sheriff's deputy in charge of the case, asks for her help in notifying McWain's now ex-wife in Denver. Em flies to Denver with her pilot friend Fritz Calder, and then becomes enmeshed in the investigation.

McWain owned a ranch in the Castle Rock/Sedalia area south west of Denver, and was involved in helping some anti-development people in the area stop more houses and golf courses being built. One of the possible developments was the ranch right subsequent to his, and they needed McWain's ranch for an easement.

McWain had been an expert and made a lot of money in oil exploration. He was retired, but interested in ground-water research. Wells for both homes and ranches in the area were drying up; the water table was getting lower and lower, and the finite water resources were being used up at a prodigious rate. There are many possible suspects in McWain's death: an attorney, a developer, a banker, and Gilda, the strange woman he had lived with on the ranch since he divorced Julia.

Andrews is known for her fascinating explanations of geology, and this book does not disappoint. Her description of the area around Denver and the water problems the area faces is riveting. She is a professional geologist and a licensed pilot, in addition to being an award-winning author.

My favorite earlier titles are Earth Colors, about pigment analysis of a Frederick Remington painting; and Fault Lines, a story of a possible murder during an earthquake.

Armchair Interviews says: This is the tenth Em Hansen mystery and will again thrill her fans.






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