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Books by Dorothy Seymour Mills

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  • - Mystery # 3 The Phone Call
    by Dorothy Seymour Mills
    £13.49

    "When things begin to disappear from apartments at Locksley Glen, residents cooperate to look for evidence of the person responsible, but for a long time they find nothing that points clearly to the one to blame. Finally, at a society wedding of a Locksley Glen resident's daughter, a violent storm brings residents together as a unit to ferret out the perpetrator by using a language clue."--Back cover.

  • - Mystery # 2 The Wet Bathing Suit
    by Dorothy Seymour Mills
    £13.49

    "Someone has left a soggy two-piece bathing suit at the pool, and the residents of Locksley Glen are beginning to suspect foul play. After all, would a woman leave the pool without her suit unless she was forced to do so? Research into everything they can think of brings them to no conclusion, until Alice One begins thinking about the possibilities offered by a symbol on a design found in San Francisco. When Alice One burns the toast she made in the middle of the night, she comes closer to the solution, which she and Starr finally pin down during the annual art show."--Back cover.

  • - First Mystery The Kiss
    by Dorothy Seymour Mills
    £13.49

    "A group of residents of a Florida assisted living facility, Locksley Glen, are stunned to learn that a young server in the dining room has kissed one of the elderly male residents. That just isn't done at Locksley Glen. The resident isn't explaining. Nobody can figure out why, even after a Halloween Party offers more clues: a woman resident discovers that the fake knife that is part of her Halloween costume is stained with real blood. Finding out why means examining the lives of young immigrants and helping them become contributing Americans."--Back cover.

  • by Dorothy Seymour Mills
    £9.99

    Acquiring a cat for companionship and entertainment, Dorothy expected that he would show a little respect for her work as a writer. She soon realized that the cat showed, by his expressions and body language, exactly what he was thinking: that he disdained her occupation and expected her to act as the companion and entertainer instead.

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