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Summary
Summary
Matters of succession lead to attempted murder in the latest of Greeley's popular mysteries.Archbishop Malachi Nolan has designs on the Diocese of Chicago despite the fact the Most Reverend Blackwood Ryan, himself recently appointed an archbishop, is currently in line for the post. Assigned to keep watch on his rival, Blackie travels to the Nolan family estate in Grand Banks, where he soon finds himself immersed in an entirely different dynastic struggle. Spike Nolan, founder of Aviation Electronics, isn't even dead yet, but his children, grandchildren, and their respective spouses are already feuding over who will inherit control of the multimillion-dollar company. The only family member who doesn't have a stake in the quarrel is the clerical Malachi . . . so why is he the one targeted by an unknown killer? To get to the bottom of the mystery, Blackie will have to sort through the tangled family dynamics of this highly dysfunctional clan, as well as figure how out his fellow archbishop was nearly stung to death by hornets inside a locked room!
Author Notes
Roman Catholic priest Andrew M. Greeley was the author of more than 100 non-fiction works of theology, sociology, prayer, and poetry; a professor of sociology; a newspaper columnist; and a successful novelist, writing in several genres, including mystery and science fiction. He was born on February 5, 1928 and was a native of Chicago. Greeley studied at Archbishop Quigley Preparatory Seminary and earned an AB from St. Mary of the Lake Seminary in 1950, a Bachelor of Sacred Theology in 1952, and a Licentiate of Sacred Theology in 1954. He went on to receive a Master of Arts in 1961 and a Ph D in 1962.
Greeley's fiction, which often told stories of crime and scandal in the Roman Catholic church, can be violent and lurid and are considered controversial by many Church leaders. Greeley wrote on such issues as homosexuality in the clergy, pedophilia, and papal politics, and he created the popular mystery series starring Father Blackie Ryan, as well as another featuring the character Nuala McGrail.
Greeley was awarded honorary degrees from the University of Arizona, Bard College (New York State) and the National University of Ireland, Galway. In 1981, he received the F. Sadlier Dinger Award, which is presented each year by educational publisher William H. Sadlier, Inc. in recognition of his outstanding contribution to the ministry of religious education in America.
Greeley died on May 29, 2013 at his Chicago home. He was 85. (Bowker Author Biography)
Reviews (1)
Publisher's Weekly Review
In Greeley's winning sixth Blackie Ryan novel (after 2006's The Bishop in the Old Neighborhood), Ryan's boss, the archbishop of Chicago, sends Ryan to check up on Malachi Howard-Nolan, a fellow priest who's jockeying for a prestigious appointment. Blackie heads out to the compound where Nolan's extended family has gathered for a reunion and discovers that matters are both simpler and more complex than he'd imagined. Nolan turns out to be obnoxious and ambitious, but also lazy and incompetent, so his ecclesiastical aspirations aren't likely to come to much. When Nolan suffers a life-threatening attack of hornets, Blackie suspects someone in his rich, nutty family wishes him ill. There's also romance afoot: Blackie's strapping nephew finds himself attracted to Nolan's charming niece. A few chapters narrated by the nephew jar, but strong character development, snappy dialogue and a multilayered plot make this one of the better entries in the series. (Sept.) (c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Excerpts
Excerpts
Chapter 1 "You're looking a little peaked these days, Blackwood." Sean Cronin, Cardinal Prince of the Holy Roman Church and by the patience of the apostolic see still Archbishop of Chicago, leaned against the door-jamb of my study. The game was afoot, Sherlock Holmes would have said, only I had a sinking feeling that I was part of the game. It was the nature of our relationship that I worry about the Cardinal and he does not worry about me. Moreover I didn't feel peaked at all. The Cardinal for his part was the picture of health in his crimson robes. A tall, trim man with white hair and a quick and charming smile, he looked like a Cardinal should look, a movie star portraying, for example, Armand Jean du Plessis Richelieu. Under the stern supervision of Nora Cronin and his harmless Coadjutor Archbishop, he now consumed only one cup of coffee and one glass of Irish whiskey per day. He also exercised every day and swam in the Chicago athletic club twice a week. He was, I venture to say, the healthiest-looking Cardinal in the world. "My sainted mother, the worthy Catherine Collins Ryan, said I was born looking piqued." "I suspect the dual obligations of a pastor at the Cathedral parish and of my designated successor has been just a little too much." Patently this was absurd. The pastor of any contemporary Catholic parish clings to his sanity only by his fingertips. However, as Milord Cronin well knew, the work of a Coadjutor Archbishop with the right to succession was nonexistent. He often said he would retire when he was eighty and I better pay close attention to the responsibilities that went with being Archbishop of Chicago. I would just as routinely respond to that if said Archbishop had the sense to appoint competent staff he would be able to play golf every afternoon in the week and spend three months in Florida as once was the custom among Chicago pastors. He poured a cup of tea from my teapot and returned to the doorjamb. "I'd look very bad," he observed with his manic grin, "if you die before I do. Therefore you really ought to go down to Grand Beach for a couple of weeks and get to know your family better." "Arguably I already know my family too well." Teacup in one hand he removed the computer output from my easy chair with the other and made himself comfortable--the Renaissance prince at his leisure. "I am told that it is being said on LaSalle street that your very good friend the Bishop of Laramie is currently in residence there." "I barely know the virtuous Malachi Howard-Nolan, save for the intelligence that he is one of those persons who part his name in the middle, that he is alleged to speak with a noticeable upper-class English accent, and that he is in fact an Archbishop ad personam as we say in the mother tongue." "There is a reason for that," Milord Cronin observed as he sipped his tea. "Indeed." "When I picked up my markers over in Rome and arranged the situation we currently have, among my other motives, was the fact that Malachi had set his sights on this archdiocese. I was not about to let that happen to Chicago or to the Church in the United States. Therefore, I intervened. Now he doubtless blames me for his failure to succeed here. I don't think he's quite given up yet." "Heaven forefend," I murmured. "So they gave him Laramie for which they intended you and the personal title of an Archbishop to soothe his pain. Malachi is, I suppose, harmless enough, despite his close relationship with the Companions of Jesus. Moreover, his campaign strategy has always been one of pernicious gossip and large gifts to curial officials such as a one-thousand-dollar mass stipend. He is in fact a pompous man as perhaps most of us are, but worse than that he's lazy. Chicago would be a reward for his great virtue and his lifelong service of the Church, by which he means the Roman Curia. He would enjoy wearing these goofy robes and parading around in a limousine but he wouldn't do any work. As I do not need to tell you, Blackwood, one must work very hard to keep this archdiocese from disappearing into the Chicago River." "In which it would be freed of all its impurities by the good efforts of the Chicago Sanitary District as we used to call it." "Moreover, you'd be walking down the streets of Laramie like a lonely cowpoke." "This song suggests in fact that it would be the streets of Laredo." "Regardless!" The Cardinal put aside his empty teacup and rose to his full seventy-four inches of height. "Mal is up there at Grand Beach surrounded by the Ryan family and campaigning against you and Chicago and worst of all against me." "I doubt that. Much more likely he is in the safe confines of Nolan's Landing, an enclave of the ineffable Spike Nolan. Grand Beach, or to call it by its more proper name Grand Beach Springs, has nothing to do with Nolan's Landing. We are loathe to associate with them and they don't associate with us." "Reverse snobbery!" my Lord Cronin exploded. "Typical of your Southside Chicago Irish haute-bourgeoisie." That comment was inappropriate and, sad to say, dangerously close to the truth. "Besides," he continued, "as I've said before you wouldn't survive west of the Des Plaines River." "As a point of fact," I responded, "you suggested that I wouldn't survive west of Bubbly Creek." "That's why I want you to go down to Grand Beach and find out what Malachi is up to. Then you will report to me and I'll make calls to certain friends in Rome and that'll be the end of that." "It may be that the new man in Rome will have some reservations about the deal you struck." "The new man is on your side. In fact, he described you to me as being very interesting. That's the way you academics stick together." I considered disputing the point but patently it would be a waste of my time. It would be similarly unwise to ask how I was supposed to spy on Nolan's Landing and its denizens from the perspective of Grand Beach. Perhaps I was supposed to send a mob of Ryan teenagers and young adults down the beach to assault Nolan's Landing in the dark of night. That they would enjoy. Milord Cronin turned at the doorway to my room and pointed his finger at me, the gesture which usually accompanies his final commands. "Get down there and find out what Mad Malachi is up to and stop him. As long as I'm Archbishop of Chicago I don't want somebody messing around with my archdiocese. Is that clear?" "Blatantly." "Good! See to it, Blackwood!" Copyright (c) 2007 by Andrew M. Greeley Enterprises, Ltd. All rights reserved, Excerpted from The Bishop at the Lake by Andrew M. Greeley All rights reserved by the original copyright owners. Excerpts are provided for display purposes only and may not be reproduced, reprinted or distributed without the written permission of the publisher.