Once a police detective in St. - Kirkus Reviews.
The surprising number of malefactors at the company isn\'t a strength of the tale, but they\'re all well worth your cathartic scorn.
The hero emerges with his virtue intact and a brace of new heads for his trophy wall. - Publishers Weekly It\'s a distinct pleasure to follow McKenzie as he uncovers layer upon layer of corporate corruption, from sexual harassment to industrial espionage, while every second woman in the cast comes on to him.
Praise for What the Dead Leave Behind Unlicensed PI Rushmore \'Mac\' McKenzie tackles perhaps his most complex case yet in Edgar-winner Housewright\'s witty 14th Minnesota-based mystery...
Housewright is such a pro at plot and character development that it\'s nearly impossible to put this entry down.
But all McKenzie has is a series of odd, even suspicious, coincidences until someone decides to make it all that more serious and personal.
And all connections seem to lead back to a group of friends the victim was close with.
As McKenzie begins poking around, he soon discovers another unsolved murder that\'s tangentially related to this one.
With no real clues and all the obvious suspects with concrete alibis, the case has long since gone cold.
The father of Malcolm Harris, a college friend of Erica\'s, was found murdered a year ago in a park in New Brighton, a town just outside the Twin Cities.
Even though it sounds like a very bad idea right from the start.
When his stepdaughter Erica asks him for just such a favor, McKenzie doesn\'t have it in him to refuse.
Paul, Minnesota, Rushmore McKenzie has become not only an unlikely millionaire, but an occasional unlicensed private investigator, doing favors for friends and people in need.
Once a police detective in St