Reviews for Sins of the fathers A J.P. Beaumont Novel. [electronic resource] :

Publishers Weekly
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Bestseller Jance’s 25th J.P. Beaumont novel (after 2017’s Proof of Life) is a mystery with heart. Retired Seattle homicide detective Beau is now a private eye, more out of boredom than need. One day Alan Dale, an old acquaintance, shows up at his door with a six-week-old baby girl named Athena. Athena’s drug-addicted mother, Naomi, who abandoned the infant at the hospital after giving birth, has gone missing. Alan also admits that Naomi is his daughter. Beau thinks it’s a simple case of finding a homeless mother, but he soon discovers that a past indiscretion of his is linked to the case. The stakes rise as his search uncovers the murder of Athena’s father, a real estate scandal, and the theft of the baby’s inheritance. What starts out as a missing person’s case becomes a life-changing event for Beau and his wife, police chief Mel Soames. Even though readers know where the story is heading, they will savor every word until getting there. Jance should win new fans with this one. Agent: Alice Volpe, Northwest Literary. (Sept.)


Book list
From Booklist, Copyright © American Library Association. Used with permission.

Helping out an old acquaintance rocks PI J. P. Beaumont's world. The retired police detective keeps his juices flowing with an occasional case and the companionship of his wife, Mel, police chief in Bellingham, Washington, and the Irish wolfhound, Lucy, they're fostering. When Alan Dale comes asking for Beaumont's help in finding his daughter, Naomi, who disappeared after giving birth to a methadone-addicted baby in Seattle, Beaumont is happy to help. Then he's shocked to see the picture of Naomi, a dead ringer for his own daughter, Kelly, and he remembers his arranged one-night stand with singer Jasmine Day, whom Dale married. Dale needs Naomi to give up her parental rights to the infant, Athena, so he can take her home to Texas, so Beaumont finds himself searching for his own daughter for the sake of his newborn granddaughter. The missing-person case expands to encompass malfeasance and murder, as well as Beaumont's soul-searching, as Jance combines crime with a sensitively handled exploration of a human quandary.--Michele Leber Copyright 2010 Booklist


Kirkus
Copyright © Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

The title of J.P. Beaumont's new case, which could equally well have introduced any number of his previous 23 (Proof of Life, 2017, etc.), is more pointed than the Seattle cop-turned-private eye can possibly know.Alan Dale, the former carpenter for the traveling crew of singer Jasmine Day, who became Jasmine's romantic partner 30 years ago and stayed with her until she died of Hepatitis C, shows up on Beaumont's doorstep with a newborn baby and an urgent request. Naomi Dale, Alan and Jasmine's troubled daughter, went AWOL from a maternity ward shortly after giving birth to Athena Dale, leaving her methadone-addicted baby behind, and disappeared. The 6-week-old has been weaned off the drug, and Alan's doing his best to make a home for her. But he'd feel a lot better if Beaumont found Naomi. No sooner has Beaumont started his search than he discovers, or rather fails to discover, another person who's even more comprehensively missing: Petey Mayfield, Naomi's boyfriend and Athena's father, who abandoned his pregnant wife months ago. Although Petey's led the life of a will-o'-the-wisp, Beaumont suspects that his disappearance has darker overtones connected to the estate of his late grandmother, Agnes Mayfield, whose quitclaim to a parcel of land crucial to the plans of a West Seattle developer left her grandson out in the cold when she died. Agnes' daughter, Lenora Harrison, who inherited the estate instead of her nephew, puts on such airs with Beaumont that he takes particular pleasure in the prospect of tying her to the two disappearances. And he really needs that pleasure, because mounting evidence suggests that his own one-night stand with Jasmine 29 years ago may well have made him Naomi's father and Athena's grandfather. It's lucky that Beaumont's second wife left him well off, because his pecunia ex machina comes in very handy in setting this quest to rights.A bighearted search among family skeletons whose main surprise is how easy it all is. Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

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