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Home >> Books >> Mystery >> Murder at Union Station: A Capital Crimes Novel
Product Information
1353561
Murder at Union Station: A Capital Crimes Novel
 
From the "New York Times" bestselling author of "Murder at Ford's Theater" comes the latest thriller in her Capital Crimes series that serves up presidential indiscretions, CIA assassinations, and a stolen tell-all manuscript by a former hit man.
 
Annotation:
The 20th mystery in the Capital Crimes series links a corrupt federal government to organized crime. Louis Russo, an aging ex-mobster/government snitch is preparing to do his part to publicize an upcoming book about his life. Part of the book details Russo's involvement in a secret international operation orchestrated by the very highest level of government. The desire to keep that information quiet supplies the probable motive for Russo's murder, which occurs just after he arrives in Washington, D. C.'s Union Station for a planned meeting with Richard Marienthal, the book's author. Soon Marienthal himself as well as his librarian girlfriend may be endangered by Marienthal's desire to pursue a good story.

 

Praise
Publishers Weekly
"...[E]ntertaining." 08/09/2004

School Library Journal
"Richly described, this is a first-class ticket for mystery fans." March 2005


 
Author Bio
Margaret Truman
Daughter of President Harry S Truman, Margaret Truman was born in Independence, Missouri. She split her schooling between Independence and Washington, DC, where her father was serving as U. S. Senator. In 1946, a year after her father became president, she graduated from George Washington University. (Her father gave the commencement address.) Having taken singing lessons since she was 16, Truman when on to perform in numerous prestigious settings, such as Carnegie Hall, Constitution Hall in Washington, DC, and on the Ed Sullivan Show in 1950. In 1953 she moved to New York after her father left office, working in television and radio for the next two decades. In 1955 she met Clifton Daniel and married him the following year. He later became chief of the "New York Times" Washington bureau in 1973. After raising four children, Truman began writing a series of suspenseful mysteries in the mid-'80s. Set in Washington, DC, the novels draw upon her political background and the many years she lived in the nation's capitol.

 
Read A Chapter
Chapter 1

Hamilton, Bermuda

A nasty squall had blown across Pitts Bay earlier in the day, the wind tossing sheets of water against the landmark pink facade of the famed Hamilton Princess Hotel. Blue sky and sun followed the storm; the hotel was now bathed in lambent light.

Kathryn Jalick unlatched the sliding glass door of the second-floor suite, slid it open, and stepped out onto the small balcony overlooking the bay. She’d carried a large, fluffy white towel with her from the bathroom, which she used to wipe residual water from the two plastic chairs and glass-topped table. She returned inside to retrieve a glass of white wine she’d poured from a bottle purchased that morning in one of Hamilton’s downtown liquor stores, and took a chair.

Below was a pitch-n-putt green on which two men were engaged in conversation between putts. She knew both, one better than the other.

She’d been dating Richard Marienthal for th
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