Crouching Buzzard, Leaping Loon
Feb. 5th, 2024 11:17 am![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)

My rating: 4 of 5 stars
I rounded up from 3.5 because it was honestly funny if you don't mind wacky situations being the norm. I mean it opens with Meg helping out her brother Rob after putting herself temporarily out of work by smashing her hand (she's a blacksmith) and he needed help figuring out what was going on at Mutant Wizard, the game making company he's CEO of (he's not the most grounded of people) and Meg's office companions are her boyfriend's mother's horrible dog (in a crate) and George, a one winged buzzard (not in a crate)
Ted, the unfunny prankster of the gaming group, is found actually dead (after faking it so many times) riding around on the automated (and apparently huge) mail cart, strangled by a mouse cord. (This was pubbed in 2003 so we're talking pre-smart phones, pre-wireless everything). THe less than competent police are sure the blackmail note in Rob's office means Ted was out to get him and surely he's the killer because a 'ninja strike' was used to incapacitate Ted first and Rob knows all these moves.
Fake moves Meg had been pranking him with and the young programming geeks working under him think are real. So Meg has to weed through the weird and the strange to save her brother. Not only are there all the oddball gamer guys working on Lawyers from Hell II (the upcoming sequel to her brother's winning game idea) there are the psychologists sharing the building (unwillingly) who are weird themselves.
With her actor boyfriend in LA, Meg is free to take risks including going to Ted's home (a place stuffed with chintz as he was caretaking an estate) and going to the office late night only to find it never empty. It's the running joke of the story.
It wasn't a bad mystery. Meg solved it about 10 seconds before the per usual amateur sleuth in deep trouble ending. This one was so over the top it bordered on slapstick. Still, I enjoyed this and since they didn't appear in the book, I'm assuming the leaping loons are the people working in the building. It seems apt.
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