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Kiss the Bricks

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

"As usual, Kaehler combines a credible group of suspects with some detailed racing lore. Even readers who don't care about cars may well be hooked by the feminist angle." —Kirkus Reviews

At the end of the first practice session for the iconic Indianapolis 500 race, Kate Reilly is stunned to discover she was the fastest driver on the track. She's even more surprised to learn she wasn't the first woman to top the speed charts in the race's 106-year history. That feat was accomplished in 1987 by PJ Rodriguez—steady, dedicated, immensely promising—who shocked the racing world and the wider one by committing suicide ten days later.

When the press, bloggers, and social media go crazy over the connection between PJ and Kate, Kate begins to lose her identity—suddenly everyone's comparing Kate and PJ, calling Kate PJ, and wondering if Kate will kill herself, too. Under siege from various trolls live and digital, Kate feel PJ's story deeply. So she's impelled to listen to PJ's family—which claims PJ did not jump, but was murdered. And she agrees to help them find PJ's killer and restore her reputation...30 years after the fact.

PJ's death was a great tragedy; Kate feels it in her bones and believes she is the best person, perhaps the only person, to investigate PJ's story. What evidence is there? She can interview people at the track who were there in 1987. She can consult the press coverage. And she can marshal up help from "Special Team Kate." They work in an atmosphere of prejudice and chauvinism, the same that surrounded PJ.

But Kate is at the Indy to run the biggest race of her career. To prepare she fills her days with driving on the track for practice, fulfilling sponsor obligations, promoting the IndyCar Series and as ever, playing peacemaker between the warring sides of her maternal and paternal families.

Before long one suspect in PJ's death turns up dead, all but confirming PJ was killed. So as Kate prepares to run the biggest race of her life she must narrow down the clues to not one but two murders, all while fighting for her own voice and identity through the storm of media attention. Will the past stay buried? Or will history repeat itself and leave Kate dead?

Kiss the Bricks is the 5th Kate Reilly mystery and takes its title from the Indy winner's tradition of kissing the track's Yard of Bricks in tribute to its legendary history.

Kate Reilly Mysteries:

Dead Man's Switch (Book 1)

Braking Points (Book 2)

Avoidable Contact (Book 3)

Red Flags (Book 4)

Kiss the Bricks (Book 5)

Praise for the Kate Reilly Mysteries:

"Read this book—but buckle in first. Believe me, you're in for a bumpy ride." —WILLIAM KENT KRUEGER, New York Times bestselling author for Braking Points

"This series always leaves me wanting more, so I cannot wait to keep reading and see what's next on the horizon for my fellow female racing driver!" —PIPPA MANN, IndyCar driver for Avoidable Contact

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    • Publisher's Weekly

      March 20, 2017
      The supercharged spectacle of the Indianapolis 500 race provides the backdrop for Kaehler’s engaging fifth Kate Reilly mystery (after 2016’s Red Flags). Beautiful, assertive racer Kate is attracting a lot of notice during the preliminaries for the Indy, thanks to her superior skill and her loyal pit crew, but speedway old-timers recall how in 1987 rookie PJ Rodriguez was making a similar impression—until she apparently committed suicide. Now a wave of nasty innuendo about inherently unstable female race car drivers combines with PJ’s family’s attempts to get Kate involved in the decades-old case by insisting that their loved one must have been murdered. Kaehler handles the mystery well enough, but the main interest for readers is watching Kate and her entourage painstakingly comb the list of suspects while also experiencing the pre-race hoopla, which is both exhausting and thrilling. Kate herself is a charmer, and so is this book. Agent: Lucienne Diver, Knight Agency.

    • Kirkus

      March 1, 2017
      Have you really come a long way, baby?Race car driver Kate Reilly can qualify for the Indianapolis 500 for the second time if she does well enough in the trials. She's shocked when she puts in the fastest time in the first practice session only to hear her achievement brings out the worst in a misogynist group of men who think women shouldn't be racing at all. Rude, sexist comments and hateful news stories compare her to PJ Rodriquez, the first woman to have the fastest time back in 1987--a woman who never got to race in the 500 because she reportedly jumped off a building. When PJ's mother and brother, aware of Kate's sleuthing experience (Red Flags, 2016, etc.), beg her to prove that PJ was murdered, she can't say no even though her schedule is already crammed. The main sponsors of her racing team are her father's bank and his formerly estranged family, and she has her own worries about both those family members and the grandfather who brought her up attending the race. As Kate struggles to get her car properly adjusted, she gets help from her gossip queen assistant, Holly, and Gramps, who hangs around the pits and garages picking up stories from the past. Luckily for Kate, her team is a lot more supportive than PJ's, who were far from unanimously in favor of a woman driver. Slowly Kate pieces together the story of a woman who may have been stressed to the breaking point but whose death ended up benefiting quite a few people on the racing scene. Now she just has to figure out which one before the killer makes her into another female driver who could not take the stress. As usual, Kaehler combines a credible group of suspects with some detailed racing lore. Even readers who don't care about cars may well be hooked by the feminist angle.

      COPYRIGHT(2017) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

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  • English

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