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Book Reviews of Safe Harbor: A Murder in Nantucket (St. Martin's True Crime Library)

Safe Harbor: A Murder in Nantucket (St. Martin's True Crime Library)
Safe Harbor A Murder in Nantucket - St. Martin's True Crime Library
Author: Brian McDonald
ISBN-13: 9780312938284
ISBN-10: 0312938284
Publication Date: 5/1/2007
Pages: 272
Edition: Reprint
Rating:
  • Currently 3.2/5 Stars.
 21

3.2 stars, based on 21 ratings
Publisher: St. Martin's True Crime
Book Type: Mass Market Paperback
Reviews: Amazon | Write a Review

3 Book Reviews submitted by our Members...sorted by voted most helpful

reviewed Safe Harbor: A Murder in Nantucket (St. Martin's True Crime Library) on + 347 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 1
Being roughly the same age as the murder victim, and familiar with Nantucket - although her path and mine never (directly) crossed - I found the book well-researched. Author stresses that the McMansion-strewn island of today does not represent Beth's Nantucket, which is an important point. Definitely recommended.
dknees4 avatar reviewed Safe Harbor: A Murder in Nantucket (St. Martin's True Crime Library) on + 15 more book reviews
An interesting story but very slow moving
foreveramom avatar reviewed Safe Harbor: A Murder in Nantucket (St. Martin's True Crime Library) on
From Publishers Weekly

McDonald received praise for his memoir, My Father's Gun, about his family of cops, but he seems out of his element with this true-crime account of the murder of Beth Lochtefeld, a successful, outgoing woman who, at 44, was anxious to find a mate and settle down. In McDonald's account, Lochtefeld's desperation made her overlook the faults of Tom Toolan, a suave but seriously troubled man. After Lochtefeld tried to break off with Toolan, she turned up dead in her Nantucket home. In an awkwardly constructed narrative, McDonald further confuses matters by suddenly shifting voices, from omniscient narrator who seems to know Lochtefeld's and Toolan's thoughts (though his sources are unclear) to journalist ("Sources say"). Nor does he get beneath the surface of Toolan, an alcoholic with a self-destructive streak who had lost his Wall Street job and been caught trying to steal an $80,000 sculpture from an art gallery. McDonald further tangles his narrative by ending it shortly after the 2004 murder, without providing details of what happened after Toolan's arrest. (He has pled not guilty and has yet to stand trial.) 8 pages of b&w photos.