Publishers Weekly
Meet Inez Stannert, the poker-playing, straight-talking, gun-toting owner of the Silver Queen Saloon and the heroine of Parker's excellent debut, set in wintry Leadville, Colo., during the 1879 silver boom. Inez is married, yet her husband disappeared six months earlier with nary a trace. Her partner at the saloon, Abe Jackson, happens to be a free black man, to the dismay of much of Leadville's uptight and prejudiced populace. When a frozen corpse turns up in the mucky alley behind the saloon, Inez and Abe, still reeling from the damage caused by a barroom brawl, are shocked to learn it's their friend, precious-metals assayer Joe Rose. Joe, it seems, had a gambling problem and a nasty secret. His death puts Inez and Abe at odds with a crooked lawman, an infamous madam, a spurned suitor and the mysterious stranger who rides into town as the new minister. Drawing on historic facts and figures of 1870s Colorado, Parker tells a gripping tale of love, greed and murder in the Old West, with a cast of convincing, larger-than-life characters, including a brief appearance from Bat Masterson himself. Inez is a woman well ahead of her time and a welcome addition to the genre, as is Parker, who has left enough loose ends to beckon readers to the next Leadville mystery. (Sept. 1) Forecast: Colorado booksellers may want to display this with another mystery set in Leadville, in 1880, Michelle Black's The Second Glass of Absinthe (Forecasts, Aug. 11). A testimonial from Margaret Coel will help alert readers of western regionals to the novel's quality. Copyright 2003 Reed Business Information.
From the Publisher
"Silver Lies is a tale of greed, lust and deception set in Leadville in its heyday, when men—and not a few women—stopped at nothing, not even murder, to strike it rich. Ann Parker gets it just right, and the result is a terrific debut novel." — Margaret Coal, New York Times bestselling author
"Drawing on historic facts and figures of 1870s Colorado, Parker tells a gripping tale of love, greed and murder in the Old West, with a cast of convincing, larger-than-life characters, including a brief appearance from Bat Masterson himself." — Publishers Weekly STARRED Review
"Like the wonderful black-and-white photograph of historic Leadville on its cover, her first novel, which won a regional writing contest last year, combines a kind of gritty grandeur with a knowing wisdom about the way the present shapes our perceptions of the past." — Chicago Tribune
The Chicago Tribune
"Parker...sum[s] up in a few sharp sentences the tawdry power of a frontier boomtown like Leadville, where a sudden surge in silver could burnish everyone's dreams. ...her first novel... combines a kind of gritty grandeur with a knowing wisdom about the way the present shapes our perceptions of the past."
award-winning author of The Shadow Dancer Margaret Coel
" Silver Lies is a tale of greed, lust and deception set in Leadville in its heyday, when men - and not a few women - stopped at nothing, not even murder, to strike it rich. Ann Parker gets is just right, and the result is a terrific debut novel."
SEPTEMBER 2013 - AudioFile
Kirsten Potter has raised the bar with her breathtaking reading of this historical mystery. Without detracting the least bit from protagonist Inez Stannert, Potter gives equal attention to her portrayals of minor characters. Her depiction of Bridgette, an Irish cook in Stannert’s saloon, is spot-on. Handyman Useless’s bumbling persona is painted expertly. Each chapter is a delight as Stannert puzzles over her husband’s disappearance and the death of assayer Joe Rose. Not averse to dressing as a man to gain entry to houses of ill repute and to mining operations in 1870s Colorado, she uncovers shady dealings, counterfeiting, and blackmail as she untangles the web leading to Rose’s murder. SILVER LIES is a triumph for both author and narrator. J.J.B. Winner of AudioFile Earphones Award © AudioFile 2013, Portland, Maine