A cozy blend of murder and romance. A fun read--with recipes! --Laura Levine Welcome to Kismet, PA, where home stager Caprice De Luca helps her clients shine in a lackluster real estate market--and where someone may only be in the market for murder. . . Caprice De Luca has successfully parlayed her skills as an interior designer into a thriving home staging business. So when her old high school friend Roz Winslow asks her to spruce up her mess of a mansion to perk up a slow buyer's market, Caprice is more than happy to share her skills. But when Roz's husband Ted is found skewered by one of his sword room's prized possessions, it appears the Winslows may have a few skeletons in their palatial closets. With the stage set for murder, Caprice will discover she can track down an antique tapestry and a cold-blooded killer with equal aplomb--as long as she's not the next victim. . . "A fascinating inside look at the art of home-staging--but did I mention it's also an elegantly crafted murder mystery featuring an irresistible sleuth?" --Leslie Meier
This book aims to identify ways in which to think about the deathscape as a cross between landscapes, tombs, bodies, and identities, supplementing and expanding upon well explored themes in the field (e.g. tombs as vehicles for the ...
Retired actress Vena Burford finds herself taking center stage again in an unexpected role - as an unofficial private eye.
When he pulled open the bottom one he found himself gazing at a black leotard, black gloves and a pair of black tights. Chapter Four Crowther said he had personally name-tagged, counted and.
When showbiz gets ugly... The world of showbiz comes to Bexford when the new series of hit TV show Foul Murder is launched there.
It's April 1941, and the Daredevil, Bart Hill, andTonia Saunders, a New York City columnist, are en-joying a night out at thetheatre.
Jake Weissman, a struggling Hollywood agent, investigates the bizarre murder of one of his clients.
Offers various viewpoints on death and dying, including those of ministers, rabbis, doctors, nurses, and sociologists, along with personal accounts of those near death
This books chronicles the ingenious ways of dying in Shakespeare, from suicide to murder, and from workaday dagger to baroque pie recipe.
In Moni Odigitria: a Prepalatial Cemetery and its Environs in Asterousia, Southern Crete, eds. Vasilakis, A. & K. Branigan, Prehistory Monographs 30. Philadelphia: INSTAP Academic Press, 251–64. Branigan, K. & T. Campbell-Green, 2010a.
In Playing On: Re-staging the Passion after the Death of God, Mirella Klomp shows how the Dutch playfully rediscover Christian heritage.