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Hannah Garvey Mystery book cover 1
Hannah Garvey Mystery book cover 2
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Hannah Garvey Mystery
Series · 5 books · 2000-2007

Books in series

East of Peculiar book cover
#1

East of Peculiar

2000

Hannah Garvey is a burned-out ad executive who chucks her career to become the resident manager of Valhalla Springs, a planned community for healthy, wealthy seniors. But when one of the members is murdered she soon discovers she's taken on far more than she bargained for—including widower Delbert Bisbee, and IdaClare Clancy, the developer's mother. And then there is Sheriff David Hendrickson. Their relationship starts when he gives her a speeding ticket, and although he is very attracted to Hannah, he would like her to stay out of police business.
South of Sanity book cover
#2

South of Sanity

2001

Hannah Garvey is back with the residents of the Missouri retirement community she manages. Sheriff David Hendrickson's career and reputation are at stake after he fatally wounds a depressed man who threatens him with a gun. When the police can't find the weapon, it appears the sheriff shot an unarmed man. Hannah and her senior sleuths are determined to clear his name.
North of Clever book cover
#3

North of Clever

2001

Hannah Garvey and her gang of senior sleuths are back—just in time to get mixed up in another murder case. The circus has come to Sanity, Missouri, bringing with it magician Reilly Boone, who's claiming to be Hannah's long-lost father. Sheriff David Hendrickson is convinced Reilly and his lady-illusionist wife, AnnaLeigh, are running a scam, until AnnaLeigh catches a real bullet during their act. Now, with Reilly the number-one suspect in her murder, Hannah and the nosy residents of Valhalla Springs can't help but get involved....
West of Bliss book cover
#4

West of Bliss

2002

From popular author Suzann Ledbetter comes "West of Bliss", the fourth title featuring amateur sleuth Hannah Garvey and her amusing cast of supporting characters. You've been East of Peculiar, South of Sanity and North of Clever. Now turn "West of Bliss". More chaos and mystery abound in the Ozarks as the continuing characters of Hannah, David and the senior sleuths of the Valhalla Springs retirement community try to get to the bottom of a workplace massacre, a serial sweetheart and a counterfeiting operation.
Halfway to Half Way book cover
#5

Halfway to Half Way

2007

Hannah Garvey, the resident manager of Valhalla Springs, an exclusive retirement community, thought she had this love thing all sewn up. She's engaged to David Hendrickson, the hunky Kinderhook County sheriff, and thinks the future looks pretty rosy—until one of Sanity, Missouri's most esteemed citizens becomes the county's latest homicide victim. Meanwhile, Delbert Bisbee and his gang of senior gumshoes are driving Hannah nuts, doling out advice, delving into an old missing-persons case and digging dirt where they don't belong. Literally. And no matter what they unearth, there's just no halfway about it...life has a funny way of happening when you're making other plans.

Author

Suzann Ledbetter
Author · 17 books

Fifteen or twenty minutes of intense Website surfing suggests that biographical segments are usually devoted to former vocations, titles published and awards won. The latter two categories seem redundant to additional electronic buttonry labeled Book List, to homepages advertising current tomes, and mentions elsewhere of honors bestowed, humbly received and treasured in perpetuity. As for the former, having not been gainfully employed in return for weekly paychecks since 1976, I assume a brief, intervening stint as a water-filled shoe insole salesperson doesn't rank right up there with the legions of doctors-, lawyers-, educators-, captains of industry-, or CIA operatives-turned-scribes. Second to vocational pursuits are avocations, which for others range from gardening, needle-arts, molecular biology and NASCAR fanatacism to scuba-diving, astronomy, world travel, and running for miles absent a pack of rabid wolves snapping at one's heels. The fiction writer in me yearns to invent hobbies of that ilk, as one would attribute to a novel's protagonist to make him or her interesting. The nonfiction side advises the truth, or an interpretation of it based on available research. My inner humorist struggles to keep a straight face. Henry David Thoreau disparaged the unexamined life as unworthy of sustained respiration. Valid or not, I'll give it a whirl . . .. When I'm not writing or speaking about writing, I'm either reading, or asleep. I adore my husband and most of the time, our children. Our basic 3bd./2 ba. home is shared with two greyhounds, two fat, hirsute cats and thousands of books—the majority shelved and probably having a scoliotic effect on the floor joists and foundation. At work or during recess, I drink too much coffee, alternating with room-temperature Cokes slugged straight from the bottles. Caffeine, for me, is its own food group and when focused on what I'm writing, suffices for the chewable variety I'm too distracted or lazy to prepare. Habitual meal-skipping isn't recommended, but in theory, should be a literal lean cuisine. Alas, it is not. Finishing a book, fiction or non-, induces a compulsion to rearrange the furniture. Or move. Why, I'll leave to mental health professionals. I suspect it seems easier to Dumpster the crap accumulated over the longish haul and transport items dear to my heart somewhere new and unsullied, than to clean what months of neglect hath wrought. All in all, I suppose sedate is a nice term for this life as lived and breathed. From an exterior perspective, boring might be more appropos. An observer couldn't comprehend any better than I can explain what it is to ply a keyboard and metamorphose into whomever I want—real or imagined—residing wherever I so desire, in whatever era I choose. For richer, for poorer, for better, worse and downright tragic, until deadlines do us part. If life and a livelihood get any better than that, I'm not aware of it. Nor, upon fleet examination, would I trade a minute of mine for someone else's better paid, cooler, infinitely more exciting and nutritious one. In many respects, being a writer is a job, like any other. Except it isn't what I do. It's who I am.

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