When a pretty, young Press Office secretary is bludgeoned to death in the Blue Room of the White House, Eleanor Roosevelt begins to investigate, questioning a house full of visiting Russian diplomats. Reprint. NYT. AB.
First lady Eleanor Roosevelt investigates the murder of an official of the Federal Reserve, for which his mistress was arrested. Eleanor, who knows the woman, is convinced she is innocent and instead suspects a mob connection.
First Lady Eleanor Roosevelt takes on the role of a sleuth when she decides to seek justice for housekeeper Sara Carter, a young woman who has been accused of murdering wealthy Judge Horace Blackwell in his White House suite.
"A Thomas Dunne book." A blackmailer is found dead in the White House rose garden and Mrs. Roosevelt soon finds that many men had a motive to kill this society matron.
In the 15th novel featuring Eleanor Roosevelt, the first lady travels to the Bahamas to prevent the Duke and Duchess of Windsor from turning the island into a German base, a mission complicated by a murder.
Eleanor Roosevelt must walk a fine line between defending the country's interests and offending her guest when Madame Chiang Kai-Shek comes to visit the White House in 1943, but her job becomes much more difficult when a Chinese shoe salesman is found murdered in the Map Room.