All Dressed in White by Mary Higgins Clark
Reviewed by Gerti
This
is the second novel I’ve read where famed mystery writer Mary
Higgins Clark teams up with Alafair Burke, and I must say, it’s
better than their first joint effort! I have to praise “All Dressed
in White” for not suffering from an overabundance of characters,
with all those presented pretty clearly delineated. The plot is also
less than simple, even if the villain in the end turns out to be less
than plausible.
In
the series, Clark and Burke are writing mysteries for a character
named Laurie Moran to present in her Under
Suspicion television
specials. Each show in the series is supposed to be about a cold
case, generally about wealthy, beautiful people, and this case is no
different. It’s about “The Runaway Bride”, a woman named Amanda
Pierce, who survived cancer to end up at the altar, planning to marry
a poor-boy turned lawyer who wants to become a public defender. The
wrinkle in the fairy tale is this – her maid-of-honor Meghan also
had a crush on this fellow, named Jeffrey, and Amanda’s parents
suspect he may be the man behind her disappearance and murder.
Laurie
and her wacky team of producers dig up his past, learning that
Jeffrey was also pictured with a girl from their college days who
disappeared. Is he a serial killer? Or is it his crazy stalker wife
behind both murders? The plot takes you in one direction, and then
another, as Laurie and her team are helped by her retired NYC
detective father to track down clues to the real identity of the
person who took Amanda away all those years ago.
Add
to the suspect list Amanda’s older sister, who inherited her place
in the successful family business thanks to Amanda’s untimely
disappearance. Charlotte is, as described in the book, “a weed
growing next to a rose” in the family’s eyes, and both mother and
father give her short shrift. Amanda’s mother is still obsessed
with her one daughter’s disappearance, and that has led to a rift
between the long-married couple, since the dad is tired of all the
stress and just wants them all to go back to their normal lives,
under the assumption that Amanda was dead, or if not dead, wanted to
go missing, so probably happier after she ran away.
This
book provides little sexual tension between TV producer Laurie and
her sexy show host, the famed lawyer Alex, and that makes this book a
little less exciting than the previous edition, since there is
virtually no romance in this novel. Still, the mystery is good enough
to hold your attention, and the twists and turns will keep you
guessing. I applaude “All Dressed in White” for being a good
effort by this writing duo, although not the best book Clark has ever
written. And as I mentioned before, the villain, when unmasked, seems
implausible. I’d have chosen the wimpier of the pair of friends to
be the one with deep-seated psychological problems.
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