Up in Flames
Full Title: Up in Flames: A John and Mary Bolt Mystery
Author / Editor: Linda S. Bingham
Publisher: Double SS Press, 1998
Review © Metapsychology Vol. 8, No. 47
Reviewer: Su Terry
Up in Flames: A John and Mary Bolt Mystery by Linda S. Bingham is the first book about
an arson investigator and his lady love. In this book, the series opener, the
sparks of romance blaze between John and Mary while Charlotte, Mary’s best
friend, has her relationship turn to ashes. The only question is who fueled the
fire that killed
Up in Flames is set on the small and picturesque campus of
Bristol State College, located somewhere outside of
who has already burned down 14 buildings. Unfortunately, the last fire proved
to be too close to home for Colpitts. When the mayor’s
barn was set ablaze, his 12-year old son ran into the barn to save his horse.
Now the child lay in critical condition in the hospital. Junie
Arnold, a burnt out former hippie is suspected to be the arsonist, but he has
vanished. Meanwhile Mary Yates, an actress with the San Francisco Deaf Players
(stage name Alyssa Henry) is on campus to give a workshop and to comfort her
old friend Charlotte Kennard.
ultimatum to her long time infatuation, Dr. Samuel Adam Kize,
the president of the College, to leave his wife or else. Sadly, Dr. Kize opted for the "or else" and his invalid
wife.
position as Director of Institutional Research for the College. Meanwhile the
campus is split apart by an offer from a major hotel chain that wants to
purchase the quaint College Inn, currently run by the College’s culinary
school, in order to build a modernistic hotel. Hugh Bayslay,
the Chief Financial Officer and Laurie Rayster, the
College’s lawyer, support the sale on financial grounds, but Charlote, Dr. Kize, and Len Nash,
the Vice-President of Academic Affairs, are opposed to the sale on historic
principles. A Board of Director’s meeting is convened for Founders’ Day at the
one is quite sure whose. John suspects the crowded
next target and takes every precaution to protect the invited guests and the
historic building. The plot reaches fever pitch as "town and gown"
converge at the quaint College Inn for the festive occasion. Surprizing everyone but Bolt, the hot topic of the evening
is not the
found in the
old body of Junie Arnold adds a new twist to who and why the
ablaze.
hardly the quiet, sleepy
town. Rather it is a hotbed of scandal. Illicit sex and illegal drugs are the
ante in
politics. The novel hosts a cast of sleazy characters to rival any big city,
including meddling wives, ambitious students, cut-throat corporate raiders, and
a few less than scrupulous drug dealers, pimps, and all-around nasty criminals.
Like many small towns, this one has few real secrets. The pretense of secrecy is
based on mutually knowing nods and diverted eyes. John and Mary, the outsiders
do not know the unwritten social protocols and wind up airing much of the town’s
dirty laundry. Fire is the perfect symbol for the passions that are slowly
destroying this picture perfect "
The reader may feel it is safer to flunk out of gold ol’
or be run out of
on a rail rather than to live there.
Linda S. Bingham brings a diverse
background to her writing. She was an English teacher, a building manager for a
skyscraper, and worked on the campaign to elect
first woman mayor (who just happens to also be her sister-in-law). She is the
founder of the Texas Coalition of Authors. In 1997, she won the Katherine Anne
Porter Prize for Fiction. She was inspired to write the John and Mary Bolt
series after sitting on a jury and based on her husband’s experience as an
insurance investigator. Her novels include three mysteries in the John and Mary
Bolt series: Up in Flames (1998); Flashpoint (2000); and the soon to be
released: Who’s Burning Paloma Blanca? (Dec 2004). She has also published: Born on an Island (2000); All Roads Lead Home
(2003); and What the Librarian Heard
(2003). Bingham lives with her husband on a range in
For more information on Linda S. Bingham, please visit her website at –
http://www.flamewriter.com/
Up in Flames: A John and Mary Bolt Mystery by
Linda S. Bingham is a "cozy" mystery. It is short on blood,
gluts, and gore, but big on romance and tears. It is a light mystery that would
make a wonderful beach book on a "hot" summer day.
© 2004 Su Terry
Su Terry: Education:
B.A. in History from Sacred Heart University, M.L.S. in Library Science from
Southern Connecticut State College, M.R.S. in Religious Studies/Pastoral
Counseling from Fairfield University, a M.Div. in
Professional Ministry from New Brunswick Theological Seminary, a Certificate in
Spirituality/Spiritual Direction from Sacred Heart University. She is a Licensed
Minister of the United Church of Christ and an Assistant Professor in Library
Science at
Categories: Fiction, Relationships, Ethics