Q is for Quarry by Sue Grafton

Ranked #13,301 in Books, Poetry & Writing, #503,469 overall

The review

Quarry (noun): 1) one that is sought or pursued : prey; 2) an open excavation usually for obtaining building stone, slate, or limestone; 3) a rich source; 4) a diamond shaped pane of glass. Quarry (verb); to delve in or as if in a quarry (to query). Source: Merriam Webster online.

Q is for Quarry by Sue Grafton is a bit of a departure for the Kinsey Millhone series. The book was inspired by an actual cold case, one mentioned during a dinner party. The idea, though not immediately set upon, stuck in Sue Grafton's mind and eventually led to her working with the detectives investigating the case. As she is a writer of mystery novels, she takes some artistic license with the case, simplifying some details and ultimately allowing Kinsey to help in the closing the case.

To help with the case, the book has four photographs of the forensic reconstruction of Jane Doe done in September 2001. There is also a page dedicated to the case on Sue Grafton's website.

All of the details of the real cold case contribute to making Q is for Quarry feel more like a police procedural and less like a gum shoe mystery. Kinsey for the most part (except for some derring-do near the end) is along for the ride, doing the heavy lifting for the ailing detectives who are in charge of the case. Since so much of the case has happened in the past (nearly eighteen years earlier in the book, since it's 1987 in Kinsey's world) and since so much of it is being handled by the police, there is extra time for Kinsey's personal life and the lives of her immediate friends. I've never been a fan of this aspect of the series (or for most mystery series) and I skipped most of it to stay focused on the interesting bits.

Before reading the novel, I also listened to it as an audio book. I much preferred it as an audio book. I'm not much of an audio book reader with the exception being Grafton's Alphabet series. Kinsey's chit-chatty recounting of events lends itself perfectly to the audio format.

Why start at Q?

Start at the beginning and work your way through

The series started in 1982 (contemporary with the plot) and has been working forward about six months in time for each book. By Q, Kinsey has made it to 1987.
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F, G, H, I and J

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K, L, M, N and O

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P, Q, R, S and T

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What are other bloggers saying about the book?

Hermiston librarians share love of literature
Smalley chose ?Q is for Quarry? by Sue Grafton and Wallis received copies of ?The Things They Carried? by Tim O'Brien. An online service is needed to view this article in its entirety. You need an online service to view this article in its entirety.
World Book Night launched in the US
Well-known books such as "The Hunger Games" by Suzanne Collins, "Q is for Quarry" by Sue Grafton and "Just Kids" by Patti Smith and "The Book Thief" by Markus Zusak, designated for young readers, are just a few distributed by the WBN group.

Reader Feedback

  • pussreboots Mar 10, 2009 @ 1:46 am | in reply to KimGiancaterino | delete
    Thank you for the lensroll. I'm so sorry I overlooked approving your feedback. I just didn't see it! The audio books are really fun to listen to. Happy reading / listening!
  • KimGiancaterino Feb 27, 2009 @ 11:03 am | delete
    I've lensrolled this to my Sue Grafton lens. I liked this book, and have read them all, of course! You've inspired me to try a few of her audio books too.

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pussreboots

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