Product Details
The Hot Pink Farmhouse: A Berger and Mitry Mystery

The Hot Pink Farmhouse: A Berger and Mitry Mystery
By David Handler

This item is not available for purchase from this store.
Buy at Amazon


20 new or used available from CDN$ 0.25

Average customer review:
(5 )

Product Description

So much for the peace and quiet New York film critic Mitch Berger expected to find in his antique carriage house overlooking Long Island Sound. Nothing can shelter him from the goings-on in nearby Dorset. A violent death in a speeding Porsche...an attempted suicide by the school superintendent...and dirty politics are about to propel Mitch out of the shadows into a starring role. And then there's his new love, resident state trooper Desiree Mitry...

Des has transferred out of her position as the highest-ranking black woman in the state police homicide department to give more time to the art for which she has a sure talent. But as she soon learns, Dorset's bucolic exterior hides some ugly secrets. The femme fatale daughter of a famous local sculptor is killed in a car explosion that makes tabloid headlines. Now Des is on the case, saddled with a pushy former colleague, and reaching out to Mitch for an extra pair of eyes-and arms-in a case that threatens to tear the town apart...


Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #1565432 in Books
  • Published on: 2003-11-17
  • Original language: English
  • Binding: Mass Market Paperback
  • 352 pages

Editorial Reviews

From Publishers Weekly
Edgar winner Handler brings back odd couple Desiree "Des" Mitry and Mitch Berger for a second enjoyable round of murder and mayhem (after 2001's The Cold Blue Blood) in the normally peaceful environs of coastal Dorset, Conn. Mitch, a New York City film critic and author of two movie reference books, is spending his first autumn on Big Sister, a private island off Dorset. Des, black, beautiful and a former homicide investigator for the Connecticut state police, has opted for such mundane duties as directing traffic, allowing her to pursue art classes at the famed Dorset Academy. Both get caught up in a squabble that pits pro-development locals against those who want Dorset to remain as it is. They also get trapped in the orbit of eccentric sculptor Wendell "Hangtown" Frye, his two wildly different daughters and murder. Handler's mix of smalltown pleasures and developers who plot to destroy the setting that preserves those pleasures is a familiar one. Nonetheless, the author's skill at depicting everyone from young children to aging adults and investing his characters with delightful quirks or grievous flaws makes this a superior read. The romance between Des and Mitch, an ill-kept secret in tiny Dorset, and bits of film trivia woven smoothly into the narrative add zest.
Copyright 2002 Reed Business Information, Inc.

From Library Journal
New York film critic Mitch Berger (first introduced in The Cold Blue Blood) loves his adopted Connecticut village of Dorset, where conflicts have arisen between proponents of new growth and keepers of the old traditions. Mitch and lover Des (Desiree) Mitry, a black resident trooper, become involved in another murder case when they separately encounter eccentric scrap-metal artist Hangtown Frye; his elder daughter "Moose," a school teacher who opposes development; and younger daughter Takai, a real estate maven. When someone murders one of the daughters, Mitch and Des both investigate. With super characters, tantalizing prose, and great plot, this will not leave readers wanting. Highly recommended for most collections.
Copyright 2002 Reed Business Information, Inc.

From Booklist
Circumstance has led widowed NY film critic Mitch Berger to gorgeous and comfortable Dorset, Connecticut, and the beginnings of a relationship with resident state trooper (and black West Point grad) Desiree Mitry. This way overstuffed sequel to The Cold Blue Blood (2001) spends, perhaps, too much time on Dorset characters: the reclusive sculptor, Hangtown Frye, who lives in the farmhouse of the title; the rich real-estate agent who sees Dorset as the home of a fabulous boomer retirement community; the school principal whose complicated private life is overshadowed by his much older spouse. When Frye's beloved daughter is murdered, every character's secret and flaw comes into play. Handler orchestrates the desire to preserve a cherished community and protect it from the need for upgrade and expansion in surprisingly visceral ways. Des' predilection for drawing crime-scene victims and Mitch's ability to find a movie reference for every moment of real life are well played. Let's hope the next installment has a bit less melodrama and a bit more of Mitch and Des. GraceAnne DeCandido
Copyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved