Toe Tag: Duplicity

Published: March 10, 2023, 5:30 p.m.

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Welcome to Mysteries to Die For and this Toe Tag.

I am TG Wolff and am here with Jack, my piano player and producer. This is normally a podcast where we combine storytelling with original music to put you at the heart of mystery, murder, and mayhem. Today is a bonus episode we call a Toe Tag. It is the first chapter from a fresh release in the mystery, crime, and thriller genre.

Today\\u2019s featured release is Duplicity by Shawn Wilson

Duplicity was released October 2022 from Oceanview Publishing and is available from AMAZON LINK and other book retailers.

About Shawn Wilson

Shawn Wilson is a produced playwright and author of Relentless, the first novel in the Brick Kavanagh mystery series. She earned a Bachelor of Science Degree in Administration of Justice from American University in Washington, D.C. and spent over thirty years working for the U.S. Marshals Service, the U.S. Attorney\\u2019s Office, the Federal Bureau of Prisons, and the Administrative Office of the U.S. Courts. Having traveled on five continents, she is very happy to call Chicago home.

TG Wolff Review

Duplicity is a mystery, the kind I call a \\u201cfollow along.\\u201d Brick Kavanagh is officially retired from the Washington DC police Homicide Squad. Unofficially, he\\u2019s got a few irons in the fire. The most promising is an airline stewardess named Nora that just might be worth relocating to Chicago. A potential paying gig, Brick is invited to mentor law students through a cold case in their own back yard. Then there is the thing that happens to his partner\\u2019s wife. For that, everything else can wait.

Bottom line: Duplicity is for you if you like appealing characters getting in the weeds of missing persons and cold case mysteries.

Strengths of the story. Brian \\u201cBrick\\u201d Kavanaugh is a strong leading character who you want to succeed. The secondary characters are equally engaging and, always a winner with me, I could keep them straight. The \\u201cmissing person\\u201d and \\u201ccold case\\u201d storylines hold up front-to-back and then back-to-front. The rapid storytelling style is engaging and keeps you wanting to know what happens next.

Where the story fell short of ideal. While there were no plot holes, the main storyline pivoted to resolution on a coincidence, not Brick\\u2019s actions or deductions. Being a mystery fanatic, I look for the detectives to drive to the solution. In this case, he was more in the right place at the right time, which falls short of ideal. Notably, Brick does drive the solution of the secondary storyline. If it wasn\\u2019t for him sticking with what should have been a dead-end lead and pressing buttons marked \\u201cdo not touch\\u201d then the status quo would have been sadly maintained.

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