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Maggody and the Moonbeams

Audiobook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
A youth trip turns deadly, and Chief of Police Arly Hanks must catch the killer while serving as chaperone, in this hilarious small-town mystery. Arly Hanks has caught all sorts of killers since she returned home to Maggody, Arkansas, population 759, but she's never tangled with anyone as devious as the local youth group. While chaperoning a trip to Camp Pearly Gates, Arly watches the kids as closely as she would any hardened criminal, but when teenagers have a mind to get into trouble, there's nothing a police chief can do but limit the damage. She's just about got the situation under control when one of the kids finds a body, and all hell breaks loose in classic Maggody manner. The murdered woman sports a shaved head and a white robe, marking her as a Moonbeam, a member of a particularly kooky local cult. And caught between the sect and the law, Arly may be forced to sacrifice what little sanity she has left. Nobody pokes fun at religion quite as effectively as Joan Hess. This is another laugh-out-loud entry in one of the funniest mystery series of all time.
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    • Publisher's Weekly

      May 28, 2001
      The ever-inventive Hess proves that a long-running series doesn't have to be stale in this latest outing for Arly Hanks, chief of police of Maggody, Ark., population 759. Arly is stuck chaperoning the church youth group on a trip to Camp Pearly Gates to help renovate the site. Accompanied by Mrs. Jim Bob, the ever-slimy Brother Verber and the high school shop teacher, Larry Joe Lambertino, Arly thinks her biggest challenge will be keeping the girls and the boys in separate cabins. There's the pesky problem of Duluth Buchanon's missing wife, Norella, but it's not until one of the girls stumbles over a dead body that Arly really starts to worry. The dead woman is one of the "moonbeams," a member of an all-female sect located near the campgrounds. With their white choir robes and shaved heads, they are sometimes mistaken for aliens, and their reluctance to cooperate with the ensuing murder investigation drives Arly nearly to distraction. (The "moonbeams" provide the author a chance to satirize not only cults and the way they prey upon the needy but also the ways in which women are victimized in our culture.) Hess makes effective use of her inimitable mix of Southern satire and smoothly paced plotting as Arly juggles horny teenagers, the ever-officious Mrs. Jim Bob and a prime suspect who keeps breaking out of jail. There may not be too many surprises, but Hess makes sure there are plenty of laughs from first page to last. (Aug. 7)FYI:The president of the Arkansas Mystery Writers Alliance, Hess has won Agatha and Macavity awards and is also the author of the Claire Malloy series.

    • AudioFile Magazine
      Joan Hess will delight her fans with this installation of the Arly Hanks mystery series, another whodunit filled with Southern satire and folksy dialogue. Arly is recruited to chaperone a group of youngsters to Camp Pearly Gates, but things get complicated when one of the girls stumbles over the dead body of a "Moonbeam," a member of a local cult who sports a shaved head, scarlet lipstick, and a white robe. C.J. Critt plays the characters to the extreme, with high-pitched tones for the ragings of the religious zealot, Mrs. Jim Bob, and warm, mothering tones for Arly's pre-menopausal mom, Rubella Belinda. The strong characterizations soon settle into an appropriate tone and tempo as the twists and turns of the humorous story line capture the listener. F.L.F. (c) AudioFile 2003, Portland, Maine

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