From Publishers Weekly:
After a promising beginning, Welch's first novel loses momentum in a plot more cluttered than challenging. The book introduces PI Helen Black, a lesbian who lives in California, and, having only recently left the police force, has cop friends who can help her out. Comparisons with Sue Grafton's Kinsey Millhone are inescapable and unfortunate; Welch is not in Grafton's league. Here, a woman prominent in the Bay Area gay community asks Black to investigate a bank robbery that left two people dead: the night watchman and a robber. Circumstantial evidence points to the criminal involvement of the client's lover, Marita Spicer, a teller at the bank: the slain thief, a small-time dealer in drugs and porn, had helped jail Marita's / brother, a former dealer--and the murder weapon was found behind her desk. As Black delves into the robber's sordid past, she discovers that Marita was not the only employee to have known him. The sleuth's own relationshipwith her lover, Frieda, presents another side of her personality but is incidental to the mystery.
Copyright 1990 Reed Business Information, Inc.
From Library Journal:
Private investigator Helen Black, on her first big case, scours the San Francisco Bay area for clues relating to a Yuletide bank robbery and murder, all the while juggling her relationship with lover Frieda. Helen focuses on the bank employees: a lesbian (whose lover hired Helen) with a drug-dealer brother; a disgruntled auditor with an alcoholic wife; and others. First novelist Welch outlines her characters well, forwards the story without too much waffling, and presents the lesbian lifestyle with no apology. Despite a few bumps in the prose, this should do fine.
Copyright 1990 Reed Business Information, Inc.
"About this title" may belong to another edition of this title.