Carolyn Haines's Lady of Bones is the next novel in the series that
Kirkus Reviews characterizes as "Stephanie Plum meets the Ya-Ya
Sisterhood" featuring sassy Southern private investigator Sarah Booth
Delaney.
It's Halloween season in Mississippi as Sarah Booth and the gang gather
to decorate and gush over Tinkie's new baby, Maylin. Sarah Booth is just
about to refresh the cocktails when she hears a knock on the door and
opens it to find a woman named Frankie, distraught at the disappearance
of her daughter Christa, a young journalist. Christa had been
investigating the disappearance of young women in New Orleans over a
five-year period--one every year around Halloween. Now Christa herself
is missing, and Frankie fears it may be connected to a cult based in the
Garden District, called People of Eternity.
People of Eternity are known to have far-reaching connections which
Frankie worries may reach as high as law enforcement. Refusing to
contact the authorities, she turns to Delaney Detective Agency as her
only hope.
Despite initial reservations, Sarah Booth accepts the case, which takes
her on a journey to a secret underworld of beguiling cult leaders,
witchcraft, and potentially human sacrifice. She'll have to keep her
wits about her if she wants to crack this case...and make it home alive.