Category Archives: mystery

Sunday Review: The Stolen Queen by Fiona Davis

I love Fiona Davis’s novels. She’ll chose a famous New York building—the Dakota, Grand Central Terminal, Radio City Music Hall—and create a dramatic story about someone whose life causes her to spend time there in some capacity. Also, ever since I was a child, I have loved to read about ancient Egypt. Something about that long-ago culture never fails to fascinate. That’s why I was so eager to read Davis’s latest effort, a novel that takes place mostly at the Metropolitan Museum of Art but also, in part, in Egypt.

In 1978, 60-year-old Charlotte Cross is an associate curator at the Met in the weeks leading up to what would be the wildly popular exhibit of artifacts from King Tut’s tomb. As a young woman 42 years before, Charlotte had participated in an archaeological dig in Egypt’s Valley of the Kings. There, she made an unexpected and significant find, fell in love, and then suffered an unimaginable tragedy. She hasn’t been back to Egypt since, although she has been secretly doing research that she suspects will overthrow the popular view of Hathorkare, a queen who became pharaoh in her own right. (For fellow ancient Egypt buffs, Hathorkare is loosely based on Hatshepsut.)

The novel’s other protagonist is nineteen-year-old Annie Jenkins, a determined young woman struggling to provide for herself and an unstable mother. While running an errand to the Met for a neighbor, she makes an unsolicited but inspired suggestion that catches the attention of fashion mogul Diana Vreeland. The encounter results in Annie being hired to be Vreeland’s assistant in organizing the Met Gala that year.

The night of the Gala, an act of sabotage threatens an exhibit of irreplaceable costumes, and while everyone is distracted trying to stave off damage, a thief steals one of the museum’s priceless objects: a fragment of a lapis lazuli bust of an Egyptian queen. Charlotte and Annie chase the thief, endangering their lives, but after a struggle, he gets away with the artifact. Blamed unfairly for the sabotage, Annie loses her job.

To try to recover the stolen object, Charlotte travels to Egypt. She is accompanied by Annie, who books a ticket despite Charlotte’s dismissal of her offer of help. While there, the pair uncover more mysteries than they ever expected.

The flashback sections remind me a bit of Agatha Christie’s novels with archaeological settings. First, Davis provides vivid details of life on a dig. Second, when bad things happen, the characters are all too willing to attribute them to a pharaoh’s curse.

The characters of both Charlotte and Annie are strong. Both are plucky women, each trying to establish themselves but burdened by past baggage. Both are products of their respective time periods, each fighting in her own way to go beyond the limits of what woman are expected to be. The secondary character of Diana Vreeland, a historical person, adds spice to the more modern sections of the story.

The end ties up everything perhaps a little too neatly for my taste, but I know that many readers prefer unambiguously happy endings, so I won’t lower my 5-star rating because of that. In short, check out The Stolen Queen—and if you haven’t read Davis’s other novels, give them a try too.

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Filed under Ancient Egypt, Book Reviews, Historical fiction, mystery, New York, Twentieth century

Sunday Review: The Grey Wolf by Louise Penny

First, a personal word. I haven’t posted here in a long time because of a combination of work stress followed by a traumatic family loss. I’m going to do my best to start posting regularly again, beginning with resurrecting my Sunday reviews.

I have been a Louise Penny fan since the beginning of the Armand Gamache series. In the last few years, however, I’ve begun to approach Penny’s books with a pinch of dread. Will this be one I love? Or will she return to the type of plot line I’ve grown weary of?

I think it’s very difficult to be a writer of mysteries, particularly if you set your novels in a small town or village. Would anyone in their right mind want to live in the same village as Miss Marple? That’s like asking to be murdered. Eventually, the series of terrible crimes in such a contained location begins to seem absurd. At which point, the author has to embrace the whimsy (Midsomer Murders, anyone?) or find an alternate story line.

The early Gamache novels centered on Three Pines, a charming fictional village that time forgot, home to a set of wonderfully lovable and eccentric characters. Eventually, however, Gamache was promoted to too high a position for it to be believable that he would investigate killings in such a relatively unimportant place. That’s when the books began to feature the “Gamache uncovers a massive conspiracy” plot lines. And that’s when I began to find the books increasingly less enjoyable.

I still read them because I love Gamache, his family, and circle of friends. Some of the conspiracy novels have managed to engage me almost as much as the village cozy novels. Alas, The Grey Wolf, the latest installment, was not one of them.

Very little of the story was set in Three Pines. I miss Clara, with paint in her hair; Gabri and Olivier, the odd couple who run the bistro; wise Myrna Landers who owns the bookstore; and cantankerous poet Ruth with the pet duck who swears. And I’m weary of widespread sinister plots that threaten Quebec.

The other problem with The Grey Wolf is that it is so convoluted. Gamache and his second-in-command Jean-Guy Beauvoir return to the isolated monastery that was the setting for The Beautiful Mystery and then travel to one of the remotest points of Quebec, while Isabelle LaCoste (Gamache’s other second-in-command—illogical but just accept it) travels to the fortress monastery of Grand Chartreuse in France. Despite the slight problem that neither lay people nor women are allowed within its walls. The Sureté detectives are searching desperately for clues to stop a terrible crime of domestic terrorism from happening, even though they aren’t sure at first exactly what the crime will be.

The plot is difficult to follow—I got so confused that I stopped in the middle to reread The Beautiful Mystery, which wasn’t much help so I don’t recommend following my example. And the story drags. For only the second time, I gave a Louise Penny novel only three stars.

The last time I did that was for book 16. The next two were 5-star reads for me. The Grey Wolf was book 19.

I really hope Penny can find a way to balance the sweeping plots she seems drawn to now with the loving closeups of eccentric humanity that made many of us fall in love with her books. I’ll read her next book before deciding if I want to continue. There are too many other books to continue a series I no longer enjoy simply out of loyalty.

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Filed under Book Reviews, contemporary fiction, mystery