Writer’s Diary – Book Review – A Perfect Alibi – Read First Chapter.com

Writer’s Diary – Book Review – A Perfect Alibi

This is not so much a book review of the story written by Anne Baines, but more about what I, as an author, learned from reading it.  To me, that fits more into a Writer's Diary.  The name of the book is A Perfect Alibi, and it is Book 1 of the Sam Arbichaut Mysteries.

First of all, I enjoyed the book immensely.  Since I began to write mysteries, I no longer just read mysteries for entertainment.  My author's mind is always looking for what I can learn and use in my own writing.

I found this book to be easy to read, which I think is crucial in today's world where people are too busy to spend two pages reading a description of the trees in the field.  So the action in the book moves at a pace that keeps the reader engaged and trying to think of how the mystery will unfold.

PRIVATE INVESTIGATOR WRITING TIPS:

I also learned a few things in the book about PI techniques.  For example, PIs keep the cars running so the sound of an engine catching won't make anyone look up or draw any attention to themselves.  Pulling out after someone would make them suspicious, but a car that was already in motion wouldn't strike anyone as a potential tail.

In spite of all the scenes in movies and on TV, the identifying of a body is done today with photos.

MY FAVORITE TURN OF PHRASES:

  • plasticky smiles
  • Death was brutal and messy.  A small, contained scene like this was outside the natural order of things.
  • the sort of sleazy people who thought the worst of others because they were so lowbrow themselves
  • He knew the sorts of things they said behind their hands
  • Now he was in his late forties, he was terrified of the half-century marker he saw approaching, and he wanted to grasp at the youth that had slipped away.
  • Clint didn't have the look in his eye of someone savoring gossip.
  • Fredricks was quiet now, almost introspective.
  • It sounded like she was the sort of person who was never satisfied because she's never bothered to figure out what she really wanted in life.  It was like she was following all the rules because she thought the world owed her happiness if she did.

There were so many more great phrases used by Anne Baines.  I would recommend this book to any author focused on improving their own prose as well as any authors who want to learn about private investigator techniques.  The prose was fantastic and I have the other books in this series on my "next up" list.