Thirteen Diamonds (Lillian Morgan)
Lillian Morgan is bored with life in a retirement community, but she gets more excitement than she hoped for when a fellow resident drops dead at the bridge table–while holding a perfect hand of thirteen diamonds. Intrigued by the astronomical odds against this happening, she uses her mathematical background plus assistance from her beautiful granddaughter and friends to prove that a murder was committed–but not everybody wants her to find the murderer.
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(out of 6 reviews)
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At first, Lillian Morgan, a senior citizen living in the Silver Acres Retirement Community in Chapel Hill, North Carolina, doesn’t seem to be a likely prospect to become an amateur detective, even with Agatha Christie’s Miss Marple as a precedent. However, after Gerald Weiss, a fellow resident, dies during a meeting of the bridge club while holding a hand of thirteen diamonds, Lillian’s problem-solving talents start to become apparent. She is a retired mathematics professor from Duke University and because of her training she immediately realizes the enormous odds against being dealt a perfect bridge hand (greater than winning the lottery) and the even more enormous odds against getting that hand and then promptly dying. When an autopsy shows that Gerald died from a reaction to eating seafood, to which he was extremely allergic, Lillian becomes even more suspicious, especially since Gerald had been very careful about what he ate. Other people think his death was accidental, although some of them may have ulterior motives. Lillian shows great energy, bouncing from one clue to another, and speaks her mind because “when you’re my age you can say anything you like.” She enlists the reluctant support of others, including her sore-footed friend, Tess, and her beautiful granddaughter, Sandra. Along the way she helps to fix her granddaughter up with a new boyfriend, Mark, which is helpful because he has skills that are useful in the detective business. Lillian finds that several people connected with Silver Acres are not as bland or as good as they appear to be. On a trip to San Diego with Sandra and Mark, Lillian digs up skeletons from the past. She also meets Gerald’s pretty grandniece and hopes that April won’t be a threat to her granddaughter’s romance. Lillian sorts it all out in the end, although not before undergoing several traumatic experiences, including almost getting herself killed. With four generations of characters, Thirteen Diamonds will appeal to readers of all ages, not just seniors.