The Cinnamon Bay Sparknotes

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The entire story essentially centered on a man named Henry Spearman who is an economist professor at Harvard that decided to go on a vacation with his wife to get away from his work that he always seemed to be doing. The events that ensue on this island make the economist work more than he probably would have if he had not gone on this vacation to Cinnamon Bay. The entire book contains many characters, each of which has something to do with the two murders that happen on this island in their own way, and it is not until the end, that we find out the connections. Some of the characters include Matthew Dyke (who works at the same college as Henry) and his wife; General Decker (who is one of the men who is murdered in the book); Curtis Foote (the other man murdered in the book), Doug and Judy Clark (a couple that is vacationing on Cinnamon Bay who has just had their children picked up when Spearman met them, meaning they can now freely go to the clubs), Detective Vincent (the detective of the murders who hasn’t had a lot of experience investigating murders), along with many others.
The first murder that we encounter is that of General Decker. The odd thing about this murder is he is found dead on the last bus of the night back to the hotel. There are many other people on the bus, including Spearman. Decker was a man of routine, who always had to have everything just right and was a very big pain to a lot of people around him. The detective had his suspicions about a few people including Vernon Harbley and Ricky LeMans. One main reason the detective had a reason to believe Harbley and LeMans had committed this murder is he had stumbled across a pamphlet put together by LeMans and his black movement that listed targets of people that ...

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...few more times and I do the homework, I understand it so much better.
My opinion of the book, Murder at the Margin, is that I would highly recommend it to anyone who asked. I really enjoyed the book and the mystery that surrounded it. I thought it was interesting how the author created a murder mystery and then decided to solve it using economics. The way the author tried to make it like a Sherlock Holmes spin-off where a mystery was solved using economics instead of deductions was clever and innovative. I would not hesitate to read any more books by this author dealing with the same main character because as much as it was enjoyable, it was also very helpful for me to understand the basic topics that go along with economics. Any person that does not understand economics should definitely read this book in order to make their life (and their senior year) easier.

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