|
|
|
|
Submit
|

Google Custom
Search
CivicLifeSportsSchoolsBusinessFoodOur HomesLetters/OpinionsCalendar

Published August 15th, 2012
Local Authors Pearls of Asia, a novel by Lee Geiger
By Ellen Borrowman
Lee Geiger Photo provided

P earls of Asia, a rather short novel of 244 pages, is set in San Francisco in the 21st century and Moraga author Lee Geiger's knowledge of, and affection for, the City by the Bay shines throughout the book. Described by Geiger as a love story and a murder mystery, the novel truly is both, and then some. It is also a courageous plea for the acceptance of diverse lifestyles and an explicit course in Sex Education 202.
When the grisly murder of well-known and admired news anchor woman Michelle Osher, the wife of a wealthy venture capitalist who is also a personal friend of the mayor, is discovered the pressure is on the police department to find some answers immediately.
The case is assigned to department's top team of homicide investigators, Mac Fleet and Taylor Mayes. Their case is a tough one. There were no signs of a struggle or forcible entry and no evidence of theft. The victim's husband, Paul Osher, was out of town and the maid who discovered the body heard nothing but did alert the team that Michelle Osher's small dog was missing.
Subpoenaed phone records and bank statements suggest other lines of investigation. Attention is called to a possible mistress of Paul Osher, a dancer who works at a famous (and fictional, says the author) restaurant, Pearls of Asia- where all of the beautiful "girls" are actually men. Fleet decides to investigate the restaurant and soon becomes fascinated by the transsexual entertainers.
The mystery is finally solved, more through luck and help from a restaurant employee than through logic - Fleet is no Hercule Poirot -and the love story has a happy ending.
The plea for acceptance of diversity is admirable but the descriptions of transsexual love may be too explicit for some readers. If you have recently come to the Bay Area from Kansas you probably should not read the book. Geiger's interesting concept suffers, unfortunately, from inconsistent writing.

Advertisement

print story

Before you print this article, please remember that it will remain in our archive for you to visit anytime.
download pdf
(use the pdf document for best printing results!)
Comments

Send your comment to:
Reach the reporter at:

Quick Links for LamorindaWeekly.com
Home
Archive
Advertise
send artwork to:
ads@lamorindaweekly.com
Classified ads
Lamorinda Service Directory
About us and How to Contact us
Submit
Letter to the Editor
Send stories or ideas to:
storydesk@lamorindaweekly.com
Send sports stories and photos to:
sportsdesk@lamorindaweekly.com
Subscribe to receive a delivered or mailed copy
Subscribe to receive storylinks by email
Content
Civic
Lafayette
Moraga
Orinda
MOFD
Life
Sports
Schools
Business
Food
Our Homes
Letters/Opinions
Calendar


Copyright Lamorinda Weekly, Moraga CA