Betty Webb Books In Order

Gunn Zoo Mystery Books In Publication Order

  1. The Anteater of Death (2008)
  2. The Koala of Death (2010)
  3. The Llama of Death (2013)
  4. The Puffin of Death (2015)
  5. The Otter of Death (2018)
  6. The Panda of Death (2020)

Lena Jones Mystery Books In Publication Order

  1. Desert Noir (2001)
  2. Desert Wives (2003)
  3. Desert Shadows (2004)
  4. Desert Run (2006)
  5. Desert Cut (2008)
  6. Desert Lost (2009)
  7. Desert Wind (2012)
  8. Desert Rage (2014)
  9. Desert Vengeance (2017)
  10. Desert Redemption (2019)

Gunn Zoo Mystery Book Covers

Lena Jones Mystery Book Covers

Betty Webb Books Overview

The Anteater of Death

But if Lucy, the pregnant Giant Anteater from Belize, didn’t kill the man found dead in her enclosure, who did? California zookeeper Teddy Bentley must find the real murderer before her furry friend is shipped off to another zoo in disgrace.

Then another human bites the dust, the monkeys riot, and the wolves go nuts. Things get worse when the snooty folks at Gunn Landing Harbor attempt to evict Teddy from the Merilee, her beloved houseboat. That’s just the beginning. Her father, on the lam from the Feds for embezzling millions, gets targeted by a local gangster; and Caro, Teddy’s socialite mother, a former beauty queen who loathes Teddy’s dangerous job, starts introducing her to ‘eligible bachelors.’ But Teddy has already given her heart to Sheriff Joe Rejas, a migrant worker’s son. Caro is not pleased.

Zoo life, animal lore, and the leaky ups and downs of Central Coast California houseboat living create a thrilling backdrop for murder.

The Koala of Death

When zoo keeper Theodora Teddy Bentley fishes the body of Koala Kate out of Gunn Landing Harbor, she discovers that her fellow zoo keeper didn t drown; she was strangled. The clues to Koala Kate’s killer implicate other animal keepers at the Gunn Zoo, including Outback Bill, marsupial keeper and Kate s Aussie ex boyfriend; and Robin Chase, the big cat keeper who s got it in for Teddy. Also displaying suspicious behavior are several liveaboarders at the harbor; Speaks To Souls, a shady animal psychic ; and even Caro, Teddy s much married, ex beauty queen mother. But murderers aren t all Teddy has to worry about. Her embezzling father is still on the run from the Feds, and the motor on the Merilee, her beloved houseboat is failing. To pay for the repairs, Teddy agrees to appear on a weekly live television broadcast featuring misbehaving animals that range from Wanchu, a cuddly koala, to Abim, a panicky wallaby and all hell breaks loose in the TV studio. To add to Teddy s woes, the killer zeroes in on her with near fatal results. The Koala of Death brings a return to Gunn Zoo and the social climbing humans and eccentric animals that made the prize winning The Anteater of Death so popular. Readers will enjoy this behind the scenes peek at zoo life, and learn that poor little rich girls like Teddy lead much more complicated lives that they d ever imagine especially when they re tracking killers.

Desert Noir

Survival in the upscale Scottsdale art scene depends on how well a private eye does her footwork…
At the age of four, private detective Lena Jones had been found lying unconscious by the side of an Arizona highway, a bullet robbing her of her memories. Now the scarred survivor of a dozen foster homes, Lena has vowed to find the truth about her origins?no matter how terrible that truth might be. In Desert Noir, the first of the Lena Jones mysteries, Lena?s quest is interrupted when her friend, heiress Clarice Kobe, is beaten to death in the Western Heart Art Gallery. Lena and her Pima Indian partner Jimmy Sisiwan at first suspect the art dealer?s abusive husband, but their investigations soon reveal that domestic violence was hardly the only problem in the victim?s troubled life. Clarice, for all her money and beauty, had a dark side; her enemies far outnumbered her friends. Among those who wished her dead are George Haozous, the fiery Apache artist whose graphic work she once banned from her gallery. Another enemy is Dulya Albundo, the daughter of an elderly Hispanic woman whose death was directly attributable to the art dealer?s greed. Even Clarice?s parents?wealthy land developers whose housing tracts have ravaged the beautiful Sonoran Desert?appear to be oddly untroubled by their daughter?s death. Lena?s search for Clarice?s killer brings violence back into her own life, yet it also brings her closer to the solution of her own mystery?her real identity. Set against the backdrop of the posh Scottsdale, Arizona art scene and the nearby Indian reservations, Desert Noir heralds the debut of a detective as wounded as her clients, a woman battling her own demons while trying to rescue others from theirs. Compare her to J.A. Jance Hour of the Hunter 0 380 7107 9 and Kiss of the Bees 0 380 97747 8 and Sinclair Browning The Last Song Dogs 0 553 57940 1.

Desert Wives

Polygamy can be murder! That’s what private detective Lena Jones learns when she helps thirteen year old Rebecca escape from Purity, a polygamy compound hidden in a desolate area near straddling Utah/Arizona border. When Rebecca’s mother is arrested for the murder of Prophet Solomon Royal, Rebecca’s intended husband, Lena enters Purity masquerading as a polygamist wife to uncover the real murderer. In doing so, Lena finds out more than she bargained for the shocking secret the cult’s Circle of Elders will kill to keep. During her investigations, Lena also discovers more about her own past. At the age of four she was found lying unconscious by the side of an Arizona highway, a bullet robbing her of her memories. Raised in a series of foster homes, Lena does not remember her real name nor the names of her parents. She thinks she has put the past behind her, but the sins of Purity’s polygamous mothers and fathers force her to reexamine the few memories she has of her own mother the woman who shot her…

Desert Shadows

After Scottsdale publisher Gloriana Allerton is poisoned at the annual Southwestern Publishers’ Convention and a Pima Indian friend is accused of the murder, Lena Jones begins to investigate the seldom talked about side of the business racist publishing. To her horror, Lena finds herself rubbing elbows with extremist politicians and members of local fascist groups. Though she becomes a target for murder because of her investigations, an attempt against Lena Jones’ life pales in comparison to what happens when she is granted a meeting with the Aryan Brotherhood leader at the Arizona State Prison complex. On her way to the Death Row visiting room, a Black trustee nicknamed ‘Green,’ because of his startling green eyes, looks into Lena’s face. And calls her by her mother’s name. Found shot in the head at the age of four, her memory gone, the green eyed Lena Jones had been raised in a series of abusive foster homes which left her emotionally and physically scarred. For years, Lena had searched for her biological parents with the same intensity with which she searched for killers. But now, with a possible answer to her identity right in front of her, Lena begins to realize that the truth may come at a very high price…
Her own life.

Desert Run

Things are never easy for Scottsdale private eye Lena Jones. Her partner in Desert Investigations, Jimmy Siswan, is leaving for an upscale wife and a job at Sun Microsystems. Her old Captain at the Scottsdale PD is off home to Brooklyn. She’s doing security for Warren Quinn, director of a documentary being shot at Papago Park about the German POW camp and the ‘great escape’ of Christmas Eve, 1944, when some prisoners tunneled out and fled. And one surviving escapee, Kapitan zur Zee Erik Ernst, a man in his nineties confined to a wheelchair after a boating accident, has just been murdered. Worse, his Ethiopian care giver begs Lena to clear him.

Lena, experienced in probing the past for answers to the central mystery of her own life who is she? learns that Ernst and two other POWs hid out in the rugged Superstitions. Nearby, on Christmas night, a whole farm family, the Bollingers, was slaughtered. A jury didn’t convict the only survivor, the teenage son. What might Chess Bollinger know about Ernst and vice versa? And how much can Lena trust Quinn, either as a client, a witness, or a lover?

A complex, stunning case based on real Arizona history, journalist Betty Webb, author of Desert Noir, Desert Wives, and Desert Run, spins an evocative, haunting story.

Desert Cut

While scouting locations for a film documentary on the Arizona’s Apache Wars, private investigator Lena Jones and Oscar winning director Warren Quinn, discover the mutilated body of a young girl. The gruesome manner of the child’s death evokes memories of Lena’s own rough childhood. Clashing with the local law, Lena’s investigation uncovers a small town with a big secret. Los Perdidos is not the Eden it first appears. Founded by the descendants of pioneers who fought Geronimo, the townspeople have now armed themselves against the hordes of illegal immigrants streaming across the Arizona/Mexico border. A significant population of documented foreign born residents also lives and works in Los Perdedos at a modern plant. Lena senses a sinister force at work in the town but where? Then two more girls disappear from Los Perdidos, and as the death toll mounts, Lena is tempted to implement some frontier justice of her own. When she finally unmasks the killer, she discovers a chain of horrific crimes responsible for subjugating millions of girls and women around the globe. In Desert Cut, the still vivid memory of Geronimo’s war mixes with the modern immigration war, the hard life on the Arizona/Mexico border contrasts with Hollywood’s slick production meetings, and the cruelty of an ancient practice is tempered by a growing underground railroad fighting to save its young victims.

Desert Lost

While running surveillance in an industrial section of Scottsdale, Arizona, P.I. Lena Jones discovers the body of a woman connected to the infamous polygamy cult Second Zion. Lena joins forces with a former polygamist ‘sister wife’ to find the victim’s killer and discovers a shocking secret: that in a society where one man can have ten wives, nine men will have none. Second Zion makes certain these possible rivals don’t stick around. In the midst of Lena’s search for the dead woman’s lost son, memories from her own damaged childhood surface when she is surprised by a visit from her beloved foster mother, whom she’d been forcibly parted from at the age of nine. The reunion is interrupted when Lena learns that a friend in Hollywood is being stalked by a mental patient. Lena flies to her aid, only to find that danger has followed her.

Desert Wind

When P.I. Lena Jones’s Pima Indian partner Jimmy Sisiwan is arrested in the remote northern Arizona town of Walapai Flats, Lena closes the Desert Investigations office and rushes to his aid. What she finds is a town up in arms over a new uranium mine located only ten miles from the magnificent Grand Canyon. Jimmy s sister in law, founder of Victims of Uranium Mining, has been murdered, but the opposing side is taken hits, too. Ike Donohue, the mine s public relations flak, is found shot to death, casting suspicion on Jimmy and his entire family. During Lena s investigation, she finds not only a community decimated by dangerous mining practices, but a connection to actor John Wayne and the mysterious deaths resulting from the 1953 filming of The Conqueror. Gabe Boone, a wrangler on that doomed film, is still alive, but the only person the aged man will confide in is John Wayne s ghost. It s up to Lena to penetrate Gabe s defenses and find out the decades old tragedy no one in Walapai Flats wants to talk about. By delving into the area s history, Lena learns that old sins never die; they re still taking lives. As with Desert Wives: Polygamy Can Be Murder, this seventh book in the Lena Jones series exposes real life crimes, and the reason why high ranking government officials want those crimes to remain under wraps.

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