Death Stalks Door
County was the February pick for the Page Turner’s Book Club at the Kewaunee Public
Library. We had our meeting today at
lunch to discuss this book. We live in
Kewaunee County, which is the county south of Door County Wisconsin, where this
book takes place. This is the first book
in a series of mysteries featuring detective Dave Cubiak.
Dave Cubiak’s life
has fallen apart. After the death of his
wife and daughter, he needs change and a new direction. He takes a job as an assistant director at
Peninsula State Park in Door County. After
a series of murders takes place, Dave is racing against time to find the
murderer. Who has murdered six seemingly
random people in and around Peninsula State Park and why?
I enjoyed reading
about the places I’m familiar with in this story. Cubiak himself was not a very likeable
character, but after a while, he started to thaw, and I started to enjoy reading
about him more. I was engaged with the
story and wanted to know who the murderer was, but I found the plot to be
rather convoluted and unrealistic. There
were a lot of characters in this novel and most were not well developed. I also was annoyed as the implication in this
novel is that you need to have some big city experience to really know what’s
going on. The local sheriff is bumbling
and has to be saved by Dave Cubiak the former Chicago detective. The local coroner
goes out of his way to make sure Cubiak knows he once lived in the big city but
came back to Door County. Living in an area where we do get a lot of
tourists from the big city, I know this is how some people from the city feel,
that we are all bumbling hicks, but it was annoying to have that bias so prominent
in the book. Also having grown up in
Michigan, the fact that author tries to say Wisconsin is a mitten shape at the
start of the book bothered me. It’s not!
Favorite Quotes:
“Dutch showed me
pictures of them as kids. Two beautiful
little girls on an old tire swing. Then
to end up like that. How sad the
underpinnings of people’s lives.”
“Cubiak was
beginning to realize that beneath the peninsula’s picturesque veneer, streams of
animosity rippled fast and deep.”
Overall, Death
Stalks Door County had an interesting setting, but the story fell flat with too
many one-dimensional characters and a convoluted plot.
Book Source: The Kewaunee Public Library. Thank-you!
I agree with your thoughts on the small city vs. big city bias, it really gets annoying, and it's also very cliched. It would be nice to see it reversed sometime: the unassuming small town Sheriff turning the tables on the big city detective. Now, that would be an interesting take.
ReplyDelete~ Lex (lexlingua.co)
I'm glad it's not just me that gets annoyed by this! I agree, that would be a great twist.
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