One final note. One silent scream. One killer who refuses to leave.
Dana Day was the queen of the City Symphony, the first-chair violinist who commanded every room-until the music stopped forever. When Dana is found dead in her dressing room after a hauntingly perfect performance, the authorities are quick to dismiss it as a tragic heart attack. But for her closest friends, the silence is a lie.
Enter the Brown Girls Murder Club: five high-powered women whose professional lives are dedicated to the truth.
- Phoebe Watson: A relentless journalist and sister to the lead detective.
- Dr. Mahogany Rhyme: A brilliant biomedical professor with an eye for chemical anomalies.
- Tulani Holmes & Dr. Shontay Fletcher: Forensic experts who know that bodies never lie.
- Dr. Jessica Patterson: A psychologist who understands that every secret has a fracture point.
While Detective Darren Watson fights a muzzled precinct and a corrupt Senator, the Club goes dark to untangle a web of designer toxins and corporate greed. From gilded mansions to a clandestine lab, they discover Dana wasn't just a victim-she was a gatekeeper to a conspiracy that could burn the city to the ground.
In this symphony of blackmail and betrayal, the Club must find the "Maestro" before they become the next movement in a lethal score.
Who Killed Dorothy Day is the first installment in the Brown Girls Murder Club mystery series. This hard-boiled thriller follows a "shadow cabinet" of professional women who use their expertise to solve the crimes the system ignores.
Autorentext
Monroe Pfiefer is a storyteller born and raised in the vibrant, rhythmic heart of Brooklyn, New York. For Monroe, the ability to weave intricate narratives and build immersive worlds is more than a craft?it is a God-given gift and a sacred calling.
Driven by a passion for the transformative power of language, Monroe uses words to architect places where readers can lose themselves, finding escape, mystery, and truth within the pages. With a unique voice that blends the grit of the city with a profound sense of purpose, Monroe invites readers to step out of their reality and into the meticulously crafted landscapes of her mind.