Search This Blog

Thursday, August 22, 2024

Betrayal at Blackthorn Park by Julia Kelly

 

2nd in the series, it's a quick and convincing immersion in Evelyne’s world of SOE, Britain's WW2 Special Operations Executive. This time Evelyne's been through the special agent training program to learn to pick locks, infiltrate suspicious locations, and survive in enemy territory. Dashing David Poole from their first, almost accidental op is back, newly promoted to be her handler for her first post-training assignment. It’s supposed to be a simple test of security at one of the many rural estates turned over to various aspects of war work. In and out with no-one the wiser. 

But best laid plans rarely survive contact with the enemy, in this case a sneaky thief who is making off with essential supplies (and possibly plans) for the building of small bombs and other weapons essential to the work of SOE saboteurs in France. Soon Evelyne's facing a corpse and David's dashing to her rescue... even though he's not really needed. Evelyne draws on her previous experience and training to instruct the constable who must secure the scene while waiting for more experienced officers to arrive.

Modern women will delight in Evelyne's take-charge ways, and appreciate David's often stepping back and letting her get on with it rather than (as is more realistic still) taking over every scene to do the interrogating himself. The writing is crisp and clear, the settings economical and easily visualized. The plot moves along at a good clip without sacrificing the credibility of relationships between not only Evelyne and David but with other characters as well. Indeed, one of this book's great strengths is how well it portrays the world of wartime Britain, where any cottage in any village might be housing staff for some secret research facility nearby and nobody can tell even their best friend what their war work really consists of. Britain may never be tested like that again, and that's a good thing, because the green and pleasant land that banded together with enduring fortitude and wry humour to withstand the onslaught of one of the largest armies Europe has ever seen is barely imaginable today.

Any fan of Golden Age mysteries will thoroughly enjoy the contemporaneous crime novels that Evelyne reads on train trips and in other idle moments..

If you've chosen the audiobook, you too may find the narration very uneven. The first phrase of a sentence flies out with tween-girl speed and inflection, while the rest is slow and portentous as a wartime speech by Winston Churchill: stirring to hear for 15 minutes in an emergency but wearing on the ear, and the patience when it goes on for hours, regardless of which character is speaking and whether their content is deep and serious or debating a new haircut.

#NetGalley #WW2 #spies

Friday, July 19, 2024

Egyptology through women's eyes: a new book by Kathleen Sheppard

 Women in the Valley of the Kings

By Kathleen Sheppard

This history will delight not only women interested in Egyptology or Victorian women travelers, but those in favour of women's emancipation, anyone examining Victorian-era same-sex relationships, and fans of the Amelia Peabody novels by Elizabeth Peters. That last group already know the series’ heroine was named for, and inspired by, Amelia B. Edwards, whose early impact on the study and preservation of Egyptian antiquities cannot be overstated. Amelia P even sails the Nile in a dahabiyeh named for the one rented by Amelia B a few decades earlier (The Philae).

The book will also infuriate many with its detailed account of myriad ways in which the female fore-sisters of modern Egyptology were overlooked, silenced, ignored, and written out of the official records even when their record-keeping was used as primary sources by male Egyptologists and their wealthy patrons for fame, acclaim, published excavation reports, and academic treatises. The free-spirited and wealthy American, Emma Andrews, long remembered only as the mistress of the Egyptophilic archaeological patron Theodore Davis, not only jointly funded excavations with him but was rigorous in her daily recording of activities at their dig sites. Her journals, maps, and drawings were sometimes the only source of information about significant finds credited to Davies or his hired archaeologists, yet she never received credit in her lifetime and there is no known surviving photograph of her. And none of the women in this book are mentioned in the most recent Wikipedia page on the Valley of the Kings (as of July 2024).

The history of Egyptology is inescapably tied to European colonialism, from Napoleon’s first visit in 1798 through to Queen Victoria’s great-grandchildren and the ultimate discovery of King Tut’s tomb in 1922. For all those years, wealthy white Europeans and Americans ran rampant over the cultural heritage of Egypt, and over its people. The author does not gloss over or excuse the participation of her early Egyptophile women in such depredations: they were, at least initially, as interested in bringing home curiosities for their personal collections as any other travelers of that era.

A central point, though, is that the early English women travelers profiled in these pages quickly came to approach Egyptology not from a competitive standpoint like male Egyptologists did—ever vying for golden statues, academic and public acclaim, and especially wealthy patrons— but collaboratively, to study monuments, to gather artefacts of everyday life, and to record for posterity those antiquities that, once freed from their sandy overburden, could not be saved from air, water, wind, and the depredations of every passerby with the means to pry off a souvenir or a chunk of frieze for resale.

Sketch Map of East Valley of the Kings. Original version taken from Egyptian Antiquities in The Nile Valley, published in 1932, by James Baikie (1866-1931). Taken from the English Wikipedia [1] Modified to show location of KV63. Topographgic lines added For the correct locations of all graves on the map please see de:Template:Tal der Könige (Ost)    

When they returned to England, or America, these women founded institutions that could broaden their individual efforts to preserve artefacts and monuments, and to formalize the training of future archaeologists. In 1882, Amelia B. Edwards roped in Marianne Brocklehurst & Mary Booth (often referred to as the Bagstone Ladies or MBs), who she’d met on the steamer to Egypt 9 years earlier), and then Emily Paterson and Kate Bradbury, with a couple of male Egyptologists for credibility, to start the Delta Exploration Fund (later the Egypt Exploration Fund), and hired a young archeologist, Flinders Petrie, to excavate and focus on small, everyday items under their auspices. Their work, and especially Amelia’s copious writings on Egypt both in popular travel memoir and in more scholarly articles, attracted Theodore Davis and Emma Andrews to Egyptology; both went on to be board members of the Fund’s American branch, and Emma later became the first woman to independently fund an excavation.

The MBs returned to Egypt for many winters, eventually establishing a public museum in Macclesfield to house their collection of antiquities, and nurtured young women with interests in Egyptology, including Margaret Benson and Mary Broderick. Margaret (Maggie) went on to become the first woman granted an excavation permit in her own name.

After Amelia’s death in 1892, it was left to Emily and Kate, as the youngest and healthiest members of that early cohort, to launch her lifelong dream: the first official Department of Egyptology, founded at University College London and opening its doors to female as well as male students. Among its earliest students were Margaret Alice Murray, who came to Abydos with Petrie’s 1902-03 season, and Janet Gourlay (known as Nettie), who partnered with Maggie Benson both professionally and personally, and excavated the Temple of Mut with her for three winters. Women in Egyptology had early learned they were stronger together than apart; their collaboration and mentoring made possible advances that women in other spheres could only imagine.

This is not a dry academic book, but a readily readable series of interconnected profiles of the women who reshaped Egyptian excavation from a disorganized, disrespectful race for personal glory into a scholarly, rigorous discipline, along the way advancing not only academic understanding of ancient Egyptian society but also women’s educational opportunities and their professional standing in several formerly male-dominated arenas.

Back around to the fans of the Amelia Peabody series of historical mystery novels by Elizabeth Peters: this book is a feast for any of you who thrilled to each significant KV tomb found during Amelia P’s adventures, or the temple of Queen Hatshepsut, or the mummies of Yuya and Thuya, whose daughter Tiye became the chief wife of Amenhotep III. So many familiar references lend their life and substance to the fictional discoveries by Amelia Peabody and her husband Emerson, their son Ramses and his wife Nefret. It's an excellent accompaniment to that fictional family, and a really good read as a standalone book on early women archaeologists.

For those whose first introduction to Victorian lady Egyptologists is this fine volume, or those who yearn for more photographic evidence on which to feed their eyes and imaginations, an enjoyable companion volume would be Amelia Peabody's Egypt: A Compendium by Elizabeth Peters and Kristen Whitbread

 

Tuesday, January 16, 2024

You'll be caught in the undertow of 'The Cure for Drowning' by Loghan Payton

 Lyrical and haunting; 'Girl of the Limberlost' meets 'Aimee and Jaguar' in this beautiful and doom-shadowed historical: a romantic triangle between a Canadian doctor's half-French, half-German daughter and the neighbour's two oldest children. 
 
It starts in southern Ontario on the cusp of WW2, when war is looming in Europe and anyone with a German name in Canada is becoming increasingly suspect. After her father's medical practice in MontreaI was diminished by growing anti-German sentiment, Rebekah, only daughter of the expat German doctor and his French-Canadian wife, is slowly adapting to life in a small town near the shores of Lake Huron. The first friends she makes are the neighbouring farm's oldest son, Landon, and his conflicted, misgendered sister Kit, whose parents think she is a changeling.

I identified with all the major characters in some way or other, from the beset doctor to his melancholic, lonely wife, and the bisexual daughter struggling with her conflicting desires for love and for stability in a world where there isn't a language to express her yearnings, let alone support her in dealing with them. The neighbours' 'changeling child', Kit, coming out as transsexual in a society even less able to cope with 'women who don't keep their place'.. Maybe not so much with Landon, who represents the patriarchal status quo, the ideal to which Rebekah is expected to aspire by virtually everyone in her world... except Kit. 

Fascinated as I was by the well-drawn historical backdrop, the ways in which the characters interacted with their era of societal upheaval.  what the novel really stands out for is the growing sense of dread, the undercurrents beneath that sun-dappled stream's surface, the inescapable emotional destruction that I felt sure was coming, even though the author did not overtly foreshadow it.

Apart from the initial near-drowning scene, this novel starts off deceptively gentle, like a placid stream struck by dappled sunshine as it winds amid meadows rippling with wildflowers. The early, tentative steps towards love are delicately crafted, a real treat to read although the looming sense of the three young people on a romantic and sexual collision course soon overshadows even the most sunlit idyll.

This is well worth the read for historical fiction fans, for anyone who wants a step back in time to a period of upheaval in Canadian and World history, and for peeling back the delicate processes of coming out as your true self when surrounded by a society that will do anything to put you back in the box you were assigned at birth.

CW: LGBTQ+, bigotry,  post-combat trauma, immigrant struggles
 
 
The Cure for Drowing

Saturday, December 9, 2023

The Mystery Guest is a cracking good mystery!

 Move over, Detective Monk. Molly the Maid is dusting your doors on her way past.

Set at the fabulous Art Deco Regency Grand Hotel, a five star boutique establishment, this is an early-body mystery, in which a award-winning and famously irascible mystery author drops dead during his  special appearance in the hotel's tea room. The maid-in-training who prepared his tea is the chief suspect.

But our new head maid, Molly, is not having it. She was once accused of murder in this very hotel and rose above to clear her name with the help of Charlotte, the brilliant daughter of the hotel’s doorman. She's determined to protect her underling by finding the real killer.

It’ll be an uphill struggle. All she has to go on is the unfinished/rudely interrupted statement by the famous deceased that he was about to reveal a long-held secret to his dedicated fans. And the odd behavior of one unpleasant maid with designs on Molly's job, yet who lacks the cleaning skills or dedication that Molly learned over many years of observing and assisting her now-deceased Gran,  whose advice still whispers in her head at opportune times.

Molly’s voice is crisp and engaging. She’s a collector of the lonely, a comforter of the lovelorn, and supremely competent, relied upon by Mr Snow, the manager. He’s not the only supporting character who comes to life with a few well-chosen phrases, but Molly is the deftly created and wholly supportable star of the whole shebang. She's coded convincingly autistic, which adds a few layers of both good and bad to her investigative process.

Good: she is highly observant and remembers a lot of what she sees.

Bad: she frequently alienate police officers and other people who should not be antagonized.
 
Does she overcome all that, and her own dubious family history, to solve the crime?

Well, this isn't her first swing on the roundabout of murder. But for that history you'll need to read the widely acclaimed 'The Maid' where we first make her acquaintance.

Go for it. It's a strong mystery, well crafted and written, with a bonus of solid representation for autistic and neurodivergent people in the workforce.

#netgalley #TheMaid #hotel #murder #CrimeFiction #authors #autism #neurodivergence


Tuesday, October 31, 2023

The Pantomime Murders

The Pantomime Murders

 by Fiona Veitch Smith


It’s December 1929. The fairy godmother from the pantomime vanishes into the night after her last performance in York, still wearing her sparkly dress and carrying her sparkly wand. When the show picks up a week later in Newcasttle, she’s been replaced and it turns out she resigned by telegram. Nobody has seen her and the request to send her effects from her theatrical boarding house also came by telegram. A concerned cast-mate hires Clara, a determined distance swimmer and private inquiry agent to find the missing actress.

Two books ago, Clara inherited the detective agency belonging to her late Uncle Bob, and is still learning the ropes. Her mother, Lady Vanessa, hates that she's running the detective agency instead of getting married to someone suitable (read noble), and that she also inherited a Georgian townhouse (complete with a forensic laboratory and a file collection of her uncle’s most bizarre cases). She's functionally independent and in no rush to give up her financial freedom. With plenty to prove to the various police inspectors and potential clients she encounters, Clara works long hours and tackles her new challenges with verve and ingenuity. A side plot about a shoplifting ring brings her a useful new assistant.

This complicated case is embedded in the now-vanished world of constantly touring theatrical companies, their rivalries and alliances, their succession of temporary boarding houses. The quotes from an extant 1929 play script of Cinderella are sure to please theatre historians. There are plenty of tourist touchstones around historical Newcastle as well as a few day trips to York by train. The mystery is a curious one, the science and detection tools are approximately appropriate to the state of knowledge at the time.

The Pantomime Murders has all the elements of an enjoyable 1920s Christmas crime albeit with fewer flappers and less gin, with a strong undercurrent early feminism. However, the first half is weighed down by Clara's repetitive thinking through her next steps, then discussing the same next steps, then doing one or two next steps, then thinking through them again in between every step. Once you get past that, the mystery clips along believably with some nice touches of menacing atmosphere and a nice twist at the end.

Overall this is a satisfying historical Christmas crime novel, well rooted in the social, cultural, and financial history of 1929.
 
#Netgalley #Newcastle #York #BlackTuesday #Pantomime #theatre #Suffragist #WomenHelpingWomen #EmblaPress #Christmas

Friday, October 27, 2023

Zoey Is Too Drunk for This Dystopia

 Zoey Is Too Drunk for This Dystopia

Pub Date:

The creative gore here is perfect for Halloween reading. And it’s kind of a killer crime novel too.

You might not think from the opening pages that Zoey is going to become one of your favourite characters. But soon you will be rooting for her, and snickering at the snarky observations and quirky turns of phrase. You don’t have to read far before you realize that the author, being the former executive editor of cracked.com, has a wry and slightly demented sense of humor.

This futuristic supermall-slash-Vegas version of Utah has hypercharged crooked capitalism at its core, and thanks to her dead father, Zoey owns a large chunk of it. Anytime there’s wealth derived from shady/crooked origins, there are enemies. And Zoey's are a special breed of determined/crazy.

This book is a sequel to Zoey Punches the Future in the Dick (2020), which followed Futuristic Violence and Fancy Suits. Those two were written by the same author under the name David Wong.

Apart from a tendency of the various characters to digress into brief polemics about the inevitability of corruption and predictably existentialist views of modern society, the book is entertaining for anyone who loves wordplay and unexpected situational comedy. It will appeal to mystery lovers who like their humour zany, and to many people who loved Mad Magazine and Cracked in their youth. And possibly to anyone who enjoys The Murderbot Diaries.
 
You don’t need to have read the previous two books in order to enjoy this one, but you will probably want to go back after you’ve lived in Zoe‘s world for this extremely eccentric adventure. 
 
#NetGalley #Zoey #gangsters #politics #futuristic #zany #election #stunts #socialmedia

Shark Teeth: she's not really a biter

by  
Pub Date:  
Bloomsbury Children's Books
 
Kita is a really identifiable character, a girl going into grade 7 whose mission is to look after her younger siblings, keep their home life on track amid her mother's partying and absenteeism and cruelty, and most of all keep the family from being split up into different foster homes AGAIN.

She’s also got hyperdontia, two rows of teeth. The kids at school call her Sharkita or Shark Teeth. She's heard all the hurtful phrases that everyone who is physically different faces, and by now expects them. Which new person would ask her what’s wrong with her teeth? Which would say no offense before saying something that could only seen as offensive? Or, what hurt the most: which would pretend she wasn’t there at all?

Kita wants to join after school activities like her friends do. She wants to be a kid. And that seems to be what the new assistant principal is encouraging. Even when she’s trying out for the dance and twirl team at school, with her mother's blessing, Kita’s stressed about whether Mama is actually looking after the younger siblings or has gone off again. She has episodes of severe muscle spasms, but her mother just tells her they’re a sign of being crazy. If she tells anyone about them, she could get locked up. Mama's really an expert at cutting off Kita from anyone who might help her. 
 
This is a touching story of Kita's struggle to become a kid again: to learn to trust others to look after her siblings better than she can, to accept help and support and even love from people who truly have her best interests at heart. Foster kids will see their own struggles here, and other kids will relate to Kita's insecurities as well as learning empathy for classmates who too often are mocked for their poverty, their enforced maturity, their visible differences.  

Five Stars.

#NetGalley #FosterCare #FosterHome #Family #FoundFamily #Family Dysfunction #MiddleGrade #Twirl #DanceTeam #School #Friendship #Bloomsbury