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Review For: Dead Letter, by Frank Shima ISBN: 159298245X, Publisher: Beaver’s Pond Press
I
find myself with mixed opinions after reading Dead
Letter, by Frank Shima. Frank Shima grew up in Southern Minnesota and is a
graduate of the When two bachelor brother farmers in their eighties are brutally murdered in their farmhouse in the late 1980’s, their friend and the town’s mailman, Martin Prescott, has serious doubts that the suicidal explanation for their demise is correct. New to the small rural town, Martin knows he’s already an outsider in their eyes, but forges his own bumbling investigation into the farmer’s deaths. When the niece of the two brothers, Diane Kraus, comes into town, Martin finds himself not only attracted to her, but with a new partner in his search for the true answers of what happened that night. There
were very few proofreading errors, which is a delight to report. However, as the
book went on, they seemed to pop up more and more. The book was written in first
person, which in certain cases in this genre, can make either the main character
or the secondary ones appear one-dimensional. The majority of the secondary
characters, I noticed, all seemed to be vastly overweight, giving in to a common
stereotype of the In
saying that, it is apparent that Frank Shima has a great understanding for what
it’s like to live in a small rural community, especially in the Kelly Moran, Author and Reviewer
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