H Is for Homicide (A Kinsey Millhone Mystery)
H Is for Homicide (A Kinsey Millhone Mystery) book cover

H Is for Homicide (A Kinsey Millhone Mystery)

Hardcover – May 15, 1991

Price
$18.83
Format
Hardcover
Pages
256
Publisher
Henry Holt and Co.
Publication Date
ISBN-13
978-0805010848
Dimensions
6 x 0.75 x 9 inches
Weight
1.09 pounds

Description

From Publishers Weekly Or "H" may be for "Hispanic," as the murder of an insurance claims adjuster sends PI Kinsey Milhone undercover in a Los Angeles barrio. Following up a suspicious claim in the murder victim's files, Kinsey trails beautiful young Bibianna Diaz, recently moved up the coast to Santa Teresa from L.A. Under the alias Hannah Moore, Kinsey befriends the young woman and learns she is attempting the same scam pursued by Raymond Maldonado, her ex-boyfriend in L.A. When Raymond's brother, sent to bring Bibianna back, is shot by the young woman's new lover, an old friend of Kinsey's, both Bibianna and Hannah/Kinsey are taken to jail, where Kinsey secretly agrees to join a statewide fraud investigation. Raymond's henchmen grab Bibianna, and take Kinsey too. Kinsey's harrowing experiences include instigating car accidents as part of the scam and unearthing evidence to blow the operation. A pit bull, the surprising identity of an undercover LAPD cop and the unpredictable rages of Raymond, who suffers from Tourette's Syndrome, contribute atmosphere to the PI.'s eighth alphabet escapade. The usually upbeat Kinsey seems a little dispirited here. She admits to missing Robert Dietz, her love interest who left for Germany at the end of "G" Is for Gumshoe , but may also be reacting to the essentially humdrum plot. Kinsey remains a star supported by a lively cast, but the insurance business doesn't test her mettle, a fact which she determines for herself, assuring readers of one thing "I" won't be for. 150,000 first printing; Literary Guild and Mystery Guild selections; Doubleday Book Club alternate. Copyright 1991 Reed Business Information, Inc. “Intelligent, fast-paced, and filled with memorable characters...Kinsey remains as engaging as ever.” ― The New York Times Book Review “Exceptionally entertaining…an offbeat sense of humor and a feisty sense of justice.” ― San Francisco Chronicle “Millhone is an engaging detective-for-hire…P.I. Kinsey Millhone and her creator…are arguably the best of [the] distaff invaders of the hitherto sacrosanct turf of gumshoes.” ― The Buffalo News “Once a fan reads one of Grafton's alphabetically titled detective novels, he or she will not rest until all the others are found.” ― Los Angeles Herald Examiner “Millhone is a refreshingly strong and resourceful female private eye.” ― Library Journal “Tough but compassionate…There is no one better than Kinsey Millhone.” ― Best Sellers “A woman we feel we know, a tough cookie with a soft center, a gregarious loner.” ― Newsweek “Lord, how I like this Kinsey Millhone…The best detective fiction I have read in years.” ― The New York Times Book Review “Smart, tough, and thorough…Kinsey Millhone is a pleasure.” ― The Bloomsbury Review “Kinsey is one of the most persuasive of the new female operatives…She's refreshingly free of gender clichés. Grafton, who is a very witty writer, has also given her sleuth a nice sense of humor--and a set of Wonder Woman sheets to prove it.” ― Boston Herald “What grandpa used to call a class act.” ― Stanley Ellin “Smart, sexual, likable and a very modern operator.” ― Dorothy Salisbury Davis “Kinsey's got brains and a sense of humor.” ― Kirkus Reviews His name was Parnell Perkins, and until shortly after midnight, he'd been a claims adjuster for California Fidelity. Then someone came along and put paid to that line of work. And to any other. Parnell Perkins had been shot at close range and left for dead in the parking lot outside California Fidelity's offices. #1 New York Times bestselling author Sue Grafton (1940-2017) entered the mystery field in 1982 with the publication of 'A' Is for Alibi , which introduced female hard-boiled private investigator, Kinsey Millhone, operating out of the fictional town of Santa Teresa, (aka Santa Barbara) California, and launched the bestselling Kinsey Millhone Alphabet Mysteries. In addition to her books, she published several Kinsey Millhone short stories, and with her husband, Steven Humphrey, wrote numerous movies for television, including “A Killer in the Family” (starring Robert Mitchum), “Love on the Run” (starring Alec Baldwin and Stephanie Zimbalist) and two Agatha Christie adaptations, “Sparkling Cyanide” and “Caribbean Mystery,” which starred Helen Hayes. Grafton is published in 28 countries and in 26 languages. Read more

Features & Highlights

  • His name was Parnell Perkins, and until shortly after midnight, he'd been a claims adjustor for California Fidelity. Then someone came along and put paid to that line of work. And to any other. Parnell Perkins had been shot at close range and left for dead in the parking lot outside California Fidelity's offices.To the cops, it looked like a robbery gone sour. To Kinsey Millhone, it looked like the cops were walking away from the case. She didn't like the idea that a colleague and sometime drinking companion had been murdered. Or the idea that his murderer was loose and on the prowl. It made her feel exposed. Vulnerable.Bibianna Diaz was afraid for her life. If there was one thing she knew for sure, it was that you didn't cross Raymond Maldonado and live to tell the tale. And Bibianna had well and truly crossed him, running out on his crazy wedding plans and going into hiding in Santa Teresa--light years away from the Los Angeles barrio that was home turf to Raymond and his gang. Now she needed money to buy time, to make sure she'd put enough space between them. And the quickest way she knew to get money was to work an insurance scam--just like the ones Raymond was running down in L.A. The trouble was, Bibianna picked California Fidelity as her mark. And it wasn't long before her name surfaced in one of Parnell Perkins's open files and Kinsey was on her case. But so, too, was her spurned suitor, Raymond Maldonado.He had a rap sheet as long as his arm, a hair-trigger temper that was best left untested, and an inability to take no for an answer. He also had Tourette's syndrome, which did nothing to smooth out the kinks in his erratic and often violent behavior. All in all, Raymond Maldonado was not someone to spend a lot of time hanging out with. Unfortunately for Kinsey, she didn't have a lot of choice in the mater. Not after the love-sick Raymond kidnapped Bibianna. Like it or not, Kinsey was stuck babysitting Bibianna along with Raymond and his macho crew. You might say she was a prisoner of love.It may be Kinsey Millhone's most complicated and risk-filled case. It certainly is Sue Grafton's wittiest venture into low-life crime. It's
  • "H" is for Homicide
  • , and it confirms yet again that Kinsey Millhone is "a wonderful character, tough but not brutish, resourceful and sensitive, a fit knight to walk those mean streets with her male predecessors" (the
  • Los Angeles Times
  • ) and that Sue Grafton is "a heads-up delight" (
  • Detroit News
  • )."A" Is for Alibi"B" Is for Burglar"C" Is for Corpse"D" Is for Deadbeat"E" Is for Evidence"F" Is for Fugitive"G" Is for Gumshoe"H" Is for Homicide"I" Is for Innocent"J" Is for Judgment"K" Is for Killer"L" is for Lawless"M" Is for Malice"N" Is for Noose"O" Is for Outlaw"P" Is for Peril "Q" Is for Quarry"R" Is for Ricochet "S" Is for Silence "T" Is for Trespass"U" Is for Undertow "V" Is for Vengeance "W" Is for Wasted "X"

Customer Reviews

Rating Breakdown

★★★★★
30%
(1.3K)
★★★★
25%
(1.1K)
★★★
15%
(651)
★★
7%
(304)
23%
(998)

Most Helpful Reviews

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Classic Grafton

If you have started the alphabet series, make sure you continue it! This is typical Grafton work with Kinsey getting personally affected by false insurance claims.
4 people found this helpful
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Three Stars

The plot is not my favorite experience for her main character, Kinsey.
1 people found this helpful
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Kinsey Undercover

This time Kinsey goes undercover to bust up an insurance scam featuring staged car accidents. It has a different feel than the first seven books. In this book, she is again away from Santa Teresa. She befriends the woman she is investigating, and of course there are plot twists that I wont give away. I'm reading the books in order and this one was not as good as the others.

Last book - "G" is for Gumshoe, she began an affair with Roert Dietz, and I was looking forward for it to continue here, but Robert gets his dream job and moves to Germany. Will Kinsey ever find a lasting love? No Jonah Robb in this book, either.
1 people found this helpful
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H Book

Christmas Gift for Granddaughter.
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Weak book in a not spectacular series

I'm dutifully working my way through this series, but most of the books are surface level for me. Kinsey is an acceptable character but Grafton sometimes gives her really clichéd lines right out of a 20s hardboiled detective movie.

Grafton is most dated in her characterization of race. Prior to this book, the only characters who have a race worth mentioning are those who are not white. Furthermore, minor stock characters are not infrequently described as "black" without having a name and serving as flat, lower class figures. Perhaps this is why Grafton decided to delve into the broader world of Southern California, so naturally she decided to plunk Kinsey in the midst of the most clichéd characterization of cholo culture she could come up with. She attempts to compensate for this by sometimes having Kinsey empathize with the criminal characters. It can't avoid feeling contrived at all levels with a plot that also makes very little sense. The cops seem particularly incompetent in this novel and put Kinsey in a huge amount of danger.

No one comes out looking very good here and the entire thing seems to have no point. Presumably if they have an undercover cop already embedded, they don't need another one?
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Not Quite the Same

I have read "A-J" so far (on "J" now) and of all of these, I feel that "H" was very out of character. It was not a theme I enjoyed and the story line was quite farcical. I like how the main character's story continues to be developed and the writing style itself remains consistent, but I did not care for the characters in this story with the gang life-style and disconnected relationships. It was just "off". jI love this series and am now thoroughly addicted, but thus far in the serious, I was just not a fan of this one and hope the remaining series hold up to the standards of the other books.
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A different kind of book, but good ole Kinsey

This book was. . . different. I didn’t feel like I was reading a Kinsey book because she was undercover for the majority of it. She wasn’t leading her usual bad-ass private investigator life. She was undercover in a life of crime.
It was strange to read, and I didn’t like it. But even though I didn’t like that aspect, I liked the book. The book hooked me and I kept turning the page. I couldn’t put the book down. Because she was around the people she was investigation so much, they became humanized. Usually you can just see them as the bad guy, but there was a human side to them in this book which added more depth.
I was hoping that Kinsey would be able to bust out more of her badass self, but aside from playing her undercover role well, we didn’t get to see it as much.
I am so conflicted on it, but I can say that I did enjoy it. The characters were very well developed and the story was different.
I am excited to read the next book, though. I am hoping it is more of a normal book for her.

4/5 stars

Memorable Quotes: “Life was good. I was female, single, with money in my pocket and enough gas to get home. I had nobody to answer to and no ties to speak of. I was healthy, physically fit, filled with energy.”

“I tried to look like an especially law-abiding citizen instead of the free-lance private investigator with a tendency to fib.”
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Five Stars

Nice biik for a gift. Thank you.
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great read.

I just love Sue Grafton's writing. All her books have been interesting to read. Intend on collecting the series. A-Z
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H is for Homicide

shipped really quick, packaged well, received as described. I really enjoyed the book, and donated to library after I read the book.