![]() ![]() She is much more convivial, more gregarious than the virtual hermit she was in California. Tyler, although she has no qualms about instructing people about politically incorrect language (“I’m not a lady.”), seems to come out of her shell a little in Minnesota. But it is not a clichéd feminism, like we find in, say, Valerie Miner’s Murder in the English Department, but a well-thought-out agenda. Like the first book in this series, this book is feminist in nature. When she finds out that she has been willed the family property in upstate Minnesota-property that her mother has told her contains hidden family secrets-Tyler decides to take leave from her job and drive to Minnesota to check things out. As the story opens, she has just suffered the loss of her mother, and is deeply affected by it. She has finished her book about violence against women and become fairly well known in feminist circles. ![]() ![]() Tyler is still writing a syndicated column for her newspaper and still owns her house in California. ![]() She has turned 39 and her dog Aggie has turned from a border collie into a golden retriever. A couple of years have passed since Tyler’s first adventure. ![]()
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