![]() “Lap swimming, the work of Edgar Allan Poe, and a simmering romance are amateur sleuth Mary Beth Goldberg’s unlikely but invaluable tools as she confronts her latest mystery in ‘Eloquent Tattoo,’” Busch reviews. college life in her humorous series of eloquent murder mysteries.”Īnother writer, Akiko Busch, author of “Nine Ways to Cross a River” and “Patience: Taking Time in an Age of Acceleration,” said Lavin combines the ordinary with uncommon creativity. “She has taught in 17 countries and brings some of her international adventures to her whodunits,” said the publisher, noting that she serves up “witty dissections of U.S. But, the scholar in her continues to emerge in her books, notes her publisher, Anaphora Literary Press, Long a writer of scholarly articles and academic manuscripts, the educator’s literary journey into fiction was an outgrowth of her own interest in reading murder mysteries. “When I wrote the second novel, I wanted to make an instant connection to the first,” she said in that interview. The “Eloquent Blood” title for her first book was derived from brainstorming done by the Wednesday Writers Workshop, she said in an interview published online by Case Western Reserve University in its Alumni News. The other mysteries in the series are “Eloquent Blood,” published in 2004, and “Eloquent Corpse,” published in 2007. The book is the third in Lavin’s “Eloquent” mystery series. “Eloquent is the title, elegant and murderously amusing is this academic mystery,” writes Rhys Bowen, an Agatha prize winning author in review of “Eloquent Tattoo,” a murder mystery by Canton author Audrey Lavin. About Books, by Gary Brown, staff writer
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