The bestselling author of Girl Waits with Gun brings the real-life
escapades of the famous crime-fighting Kopp sisters to life in this
extraordinary novel that is "perfect for book groups" (Booklist).
Deputy sheriff Constance Kopp stands up to the "morality" laws of 1916,
defending the independent young women in her prison against dubious
charges when no one else will. From the patriotic Edna Heustis, who left
home to work in a munitions factory, to the sixteen-year-old runaway
Minnie Davis, these and other publicly shamed women who were packed off
to a state-run reformatory find an unlikely ally in Constance, who uses
her authority -- and occasionally exceeds it -- to investigate and
defend them at all costs. But it's Constance's sister Fleurette who
forces her to reckon with her own ideas of how a young woman should and
shouldn't behave. Set against the backdrop of World War I, and drawn
from true characters and events, this novel is timeless in its themes of
justice and equality, and is sure to delight fans of historical and
detective fiction alike.