A review by efbeckett
A Bullet in the Ballet by S.J. Simon, Caryl Brahms

3.0

Was kind of surprised this his as much of a rep with mystery fans as it does: it's much more effective as a lampoon of the world of ballet than it is as a whodunnit. When you're reading something that paints in such broad strokes it's fairly hard to really care about characters with names like Petunia Patch, Anton Palook, and Stroganoff, let alone who is killing them, or why. It's fairly amusing nevertheless, might even read it again if I'm still alive in 10 or 20 years.