



Shadowed by Death
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- $3.99
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- $3.99
Publisher Description
San Francisco, 1944. Oliver Wright, a homicide detective on medical leave from the Marines, is investigating an attempted murder at the Presidio when the Army asks him to guard Sophia Nirenska, a Polish resistance fighter who survived the Warsaw ghetto uprising in Poland and is touring America to raise money for children hidden from the Nazis in Europe.
Neither is happy with the assignment, but after a car deliberately hits Sophia, they reluctantly agree that he should travel with her to Petaluma where she hopes to get the help of Jewish chicken farmers. She insists political enemies want to silence her, but Oliver believes the motive is more personal and connected to the attempted murder of the woman found in the Presidio. He and his German shepherd, Harley, try to protect Sophia, but she insists on doing things her own way—a dangerous decision that puts them both in mortal danger.
When Oliver rescues a girl and her dog who are running for their lives, he finds the key to the dark secret at the heart of the threat to Sophia, a secret with its roots in Poland. When he does, he is forced to choose between enforcing the law as he knows it—and jeopardizing Sophia—or accepting a rougher kind of justice.
This fast-paced mystery illuminates the fears and troubles World War II inflicts on many groups of people. It is also a story full of love, kindness, and a celebration of the gift of finding family among strangers.
Shadowed by Death will appeal to readers interested in northern California, World War II, the destructiveness of totalitarianism, the bond between people and dogs, and communities that celebrate food and friendship.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
Set in 1944 San Francisco, Adler's superior second whodunit featuring homicide detective Oliver Wright (after 2014's In the Shadow of Lies) finds Wright, who has returned to the U.S. from combat in the Pacific with only one good leg, serving as a JAG lieutenant. He has mixed feelings about his first homicide case: "regret for the victim and her family, and an unseemly exhilaration at being able to do the job I loved a job that required someone to die violently, unwillingly." This time, a woman resembling Greta Garbo, whose battered body was found in the Presidio by a passerby, clings to life, having suffered two severe head wounds. The only clue to her identity is a flyer advertising a fund-raising talk the previous day about the Hidden Children of Europe, which was given by Sophia Nirenska and Marek Landau, Polish Jewish resistance fighters. Before Wright can locate Nirenska and Landau, they, too, are attacked, leading him to suspect a link between the crimes. Fans of Sheldon Russell's Hook Runyon series will find this a more than acceptable substitute. (BookLife)