Search - Happy Are the Peace Makers

Happy Are the Peace Makers
Author: Andrew M. Greeley
Book Information
Publisher: Jove Books
Book Type: Paperback
Rating:
ISBN-13: 9780515110753 - ISBN-10: 0515110752
Publication Date: 4/1/1993
Pages: 300
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Genres:Other Versions of this Book: Hardcover, Paperback, Audio Cassette


Rate These Member Reviews

Stephanie S. (punkinema) from BRENTWOOD, CA wrote on 11/9/2007...


A delightful romantic mystery set in Ireland. The protagonist is a retired cop from Chicago who has been hired to find a murderer. The woman who is presumed guilty (but unproven by the police) steals his heart from the moment he sees her. Unhappy family and jealous relatives make his task difficult and would have been impossible without the help of Father Ryan. You'll enjoy this one!

MAUREEN W. from MIDDLETOWN, NY wrote on 2/17/2007...


Andrew Greeley always a good read.

Anna P. (AnnaLovesAnimals) from BALTIMORE, MD wrote on 1/14/2007...


Father Greeley ( Happy Are the Meek ) not only kissed the Blarney Stone but swallowed it whole for this masterful Bishop "Blackie" Ryan whodunit. Setting it in Dublin on Bloomsday, Greeley makes James Joyce as much a part of the plot as the IRA. Beautiful and seductive Nora MacDonaugh's husband, industrialist Jim Lark MacDonaugh, was blown to bits by a bomb just a week after he changed his will in her favor. When the Dublin police discover that her first husband committed suicide and also left his money to her, Nora becomes the top suspect. Her late husband's second-in-command, Arthur T. Regan, hires ex-Chicago cop Tim MacCarthy to pin the crime on her. But MacCarthy is not convinced of her guilt; and since he is nothing if not the second-best detective in Chicago, he soon teams up with the best, Bishop Ryan, to defend Nora and find the real killer. Together, they combat the cynical Dublin police, the IRA, and the late MacDonaugh's family and business associates. MacCarthy proves as entertaining as Ryan, and the inevitable love affair between the detective and Nora is both realistic and tension-provoking.

Cheryl (Toni) J. (toni) from HILLSBOROUGH, NC wrote on 10/22/2006...


Father Greeley ( Happy Are the Meek ) not only kissed the Blarney Stone but swallowed it whole for this masterful Bishop "Blackie" Ryan whodunit. Setting it in Dublin on Bloomsday, Greeley makes James Joyce as much a part of the plot as the IRA. Beautiful and seductive Nora MacDonaugh's husband, industrialist Jim Lark MacDonaugh, was blown to bits by a bomb just a week after he changed his will in her favor. When the Dublin police discover that her first husband committed suicide and also left his money to her, Nora becomes the top suspect. Her late husband's second-in-command, Arthur T. Regan, hires ex-Chicago cop Tim MacCarthy to pin the crime on her. But MacCarthy is not convinced of her guilt; and since he is nothing if not the second-best detective in Chicago, he soon teams up with the best, Bishop Ryan, to defend Nora and find the real killer. Together, they combat the cynical Dublin police, the IRA, and the late MacDonaugh's family and business associates. MacCarthy proves as entertaining as Ryan, and the inevitable love affair between the detective and Nora is both realistic and tension-provoking.

Judy H. (hart2hart) from PANTEGO, TX wrote on 9/17/2006...


Rich, beautiful, seductive...and suspected of murder. Nora MacDonaugh had bac luck with husbands: they both died under mysterious circumstances. Her latest, an Irish millionaire, had changed his will in her favor a week before the bomb went off in his study. Was it political terror? Suicide? Or the work of a very clever Black Widow?