Daily Mining Gazette, Houghton, Michigan

Barr, Hamilton return in darker mystery

By JANE NORDBERG, DMG Writer

 

HOUGHTON Ñ Amateur sleuth Robin Hamilton and her creator, award-winning journalist Nancy Barr, are at it again.

ÒPage One: Vanished,Ó is the second of BarrÕs mystery novels, and highlights HamiltonÕs quest to discover the fate of five young girls who have gone missing over a 30-year period. Like ÒPage One: Hit and Run,Ó BarrÕs debut novel that was set in Escanaba, ÒVanishedÓ also features the Upper Peninsula places Barr has admired or called home.

ÒThe U.P. is in many ways one small town,Ó she says of the novel which takes readers from Copper Harbor to Ishpeming and back.

ÒHere, we donÕt think anything of driving an hour and a half to go shopping or attend a sporting event,Ó she said. ÒDistance is not the big deal it is in the larger areas.Ó

  Barr has kept many of the supporting characters from her first novel. HamiltonÕs father, Hank, continues in his role as advisor and protector, while Belle continues to ride shotgun and provide Hamilton with the kind of unquestioning devotion only a bassett hound can.

  But with the addition of likably different Aunt Gina, Barr has introduced a character that will provide Hamilton with the impetus to deal with the early loss of her mother and the murder of her fiance; two events that she is unwilling to face.

ÒRobin has not dealt well with her loss,Ó Barr said. ÒIn fact, she hasnÕt dealt with it at all. Aunt Gina helps her learn that itÕs okay to open up and break through.Ó

Barr admits that Vanished is considerably dark, taking the reader both into the secrets of the mortuary trade and into the minds of abductors of young girls.

The idea, she said, came from an Ozzy Osbourne song that in her own words, was Òabout a really sick guy.Ó That, and a fascination for funeral homes and the duties of funeral directors, led to the amalgamation that is real only in the literary sense.

  Hancock funeral director Mark Dennis provided immeasurable help with her research into the hours a funeral director keeps and their impact on the family.

  ÒI owe a lot to Mark,Ó she said. ÒItÕs a very respectable profession and he was a tremendous help.Ó

Shrugging off the Òsophomore curse,Ó Barr said the second book was much easier to write than the first.

  ÒI like the story better, and I think I have a more confident writing style,Ó she said. ÒRobin is more real to me now.Ó

Barr is already at work on the third book in the series, called ÒPage One: White Out.Ó Set in Alger and Delta counties, the title refers to the U.P.Õs legendary winters as well as its drug trade. For that novel, Barr will draw upon her experiences as a reporter with the Daily Press, where she covered drug cases on the law enforcement beat.

  ÒItÕs getting much more serious up here,Ó she said. ÒIn fact, itÕs alarming. Part of me hopes that book will be a wake-up call.Ó

ÒPage One: VanishedÓ is available at local bookstores for $16.95. A book launch is scheduled for June 2 at the Einerlei in Chassell, and Barr will give a talk on the writing and publication processes July 5 at 7 p.m. at GrandpaÕs Barn in Copper Harbor. Registration is required for the Einerlei event.

  In addition to two published novels, an essay Barr wrote on the U.P. that framed the setting for her first novel is being published in the the 100th edition of Mystery Scene Magazine, a publication for diehard mystery fans with a worldwide circulation of 12,000.

  The magazine is available at many bookstores and at their Web site at www.mysteryscenemag.com.

Jane Nordberg can be reached at jnordberg@mininggazette.com

Traverse City Record Eagle, Traverse City Eagle

7/15/2007

On the Shelf

By Al Parker
Traverse City Record-Eagle

TRAVERSE CITY - There's a rich tradition of newspaper reporters abandoning the turmoil of the newsroom to take up the solitary life of an author. Several of my favorites Ñ Ernest Hemingway, David Halberstam and Loren Estleman Ñ did it very successfully. Now Upper Peninsula journalist-turned-author Nancy Barr has grabbed my attention with her new book, "Page One: VanishedÓ (Arbutus Press, 304 pages), the second mystery novel in Barr's Robin Hamilton series. The story centers on Hamilton, a newspaper reporter, who stumbles across the 1974 tale of a missing girl. She discovers that four other teens have similarly vanished without a trace and Robin scours the length of the U.P. to track their fate. The girls remain hidden until Robin encounters the truth. It's a page turner that transports readers across the Upper Peninsula.