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Death of a Political Plant

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
Ann Ripley's horticultural heroine, Louise Eldridge, enchanted mystery lovers of all varieties in Death of a Garden Pest and Mulch
.  Now she returns in a witty new tale of muckraking, murder, and deeply buried—and very dangerous—secrets.  
Louise's TV show, Gardening with Nature, has made her a celebrity, sweeping her from lawn-mower commercials all the way to the president's National Environmental Commission.  Not that Louise is about to get her hands dirty in the mudslinging campaigns of an election year.  As usual, her main concerns are right in her own backyard.
Here, in Washington's suburban Sylvan Valley, she is subject to an unwelcome infestation of houseguests that threatens to crowd out her houseplants.  Least welcome of all are three bossy busybodies in town for the Perennial Plant Society convention, who fete Louise as official "Plant Person of the Year" but press her to slash back the sweetgums and swamp oaks that give her beloved garden its pristine air.
Her grin-and-bear-it mood is lightened, however, by the arrival of an old flame.  Twenty years ago, in the first bloom of youth, Louise fell heavily for Jay McCormick's crooked smile and crusading charm.  Now, he's an investigative journalist looking worriedly over his shoulder.  Jay confides that he's come on two distinct undercover missions.  One is to ensure that his ex-wife, a high-powered political lawyer, doesn't cheat on the rules for custody of their young daughter.  Around the other, he raises an impenetrable thicket of secrecy.
But Jay's cover is blown when he surfaces, a nibbled corpse, in a neighbor's ornamental fishpond.  Who put him there? And what was the mysterious story he was investigating? Only Louise can unearth the trail that leads from a missing computer to a pistol-packing intruder trampling her purple-spotted toad lilies to evidence hidden where only a hardcore gardener could find it.  Soon she's digging up enough dirt—social, marital, and political—to uproot some of Washington's top players...if she doesn't get herself nipped in the bud first.
Ripening suspense, a thorny plot, and plenty of gardening tips make Death of a Political Plant a perfect bouquet of murder, mystery, and mayhem.
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    • Publisher's Weekly

      March 2, 1998
      Ripley's Louise Eldridge mysteries keep getting better. In her third puzzler, (after Mulch and Death of a Garden Pest), Louise, co-host of Washington, D.C., public television's Gardening with Nature, finds herself embroiled in presidential politics and overwhelmed by houseguests--and she's not sure which is worse. Clinton-esque President Fairchild's chief of staff is pushing her to feature the president's environmental initiatives on her show, while the minions of a presidential hopeful (Newtily named Goodrich) make veiled threats about pinching the funding for public broadcasting. Then an old flame, Jay McCormick, an investigative reporter digging into a sensitive political story and who needs to lie low for a couple of days, asks to stay with her. When more unexpected houseguests arrive (representatives of the Perennial Plant Society, which has just named her Plant Person of the year), Louise moves Jay to the home of vacationing friends. The next morning, she finds his body floating in the friends' water garden. Missing are his computer and disks; suddenly present is an intruder nosing around Louise's house. The disks finally turn up, loaded with enough dirt to sink one of the presidential candidates for good--and someone is perfectly willing to kill Louise to make sure they don't reach the public. If real-life political scandal has stolen some of Ripley's thunder, her well-paced tale is nevertheless peopled with fully dimensioned characters, and her gardening tips are both intelligent and relevant to the story.

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