by A.M. Stuart
Rating: ★★★★
isbn: 9780593335482
Series: Harriet Gordon #3
Publication Date: April 5, 2022
Pages: 347
Genre: Fiction, Historical, Mystery
Publisher: Berkley Prime Crime
Craving a change of pace, Harriet Gordon, joins a local musical theatre production but when a fellow cast member is brutally killed, Harriet and Inspector Curran must turn the spotlight on murder in this all-new mystery from the author of Revenge in Rubies.
Between working at her brother’s school and typing up Inspector Robert Curran’s police reports, Harriet Gordon has little time for personal pursuits and she has been enjoying the rehearsals for her role in the Singapore Amateur Dramatic and Musical Society’s latest production – Pirates of Penzance. But Harriet quickly discovers tensions run deep within the theatre company and when the leading man is found murdered, suspicions abound, exposing scandalous behavior as well as some insidious crimes.
Inspector Curran once again turns to Harriet for help with this difficult case, but his own life begins to unravel as a mysterious man turns up on his doorstep claiming to know more about Curran’s painful past than he himself does. And after the one person he has always counted on delivers him some devastating news, the line between his personal and professional life begins to blur. Now, more than ever, Curran needs Harriet’s steadfast assistance, and when another cast member meets a violent end, Curran and Harriet will have to close in on a killer determined to make this case their final curtain call.
In a lot of ways, this series feels like a direct reaction to Little, Brown’s Su Lin series, written by Ovidia Yu: it’s set in British Colonial Singapore (albeit pre WWI as opposed to Yu’s interwar setting); Harriet Gordon, the female lead, though white and British, has a scandalous background and earns a meagre salary by typing reports for the police; Robert Curren is the detective – also with a scandalous past, a shady history, and a very private man with unconventional habits. The two series are so similar, in fact, that I was prepared to swear that a character in this series – Curran’s love interest – was actually the love interest of the detective in the Su Lin series. Both series have a Singh on the police force.
There’s a lot of similarities between the two series, but there are also a lot of fundamental differences. Yu’s Su Lin series feels authentic from the viewpoint of the different Asian citizens of Singapore and Yu’s Singapore feels like the hot, humid, barely tamed jungle it surely was; reading her books is to put yourself in a very exotic setting. Stuart’s pre-WWI Singapore is undoubtedly authentic too, but it’s definitely from the viewpoint of the colonisers. Every bit of the story bleeds British, right down to the setting of Evil in Emerald, an amateur production of Pirates of Penzance. All the primary characters are white (British, Aussie, Kiwi), and Singapore is sanitised.
I was just a touch more than indifferent after reading the first two books, but bought this one last week because I was in the mood for an historical mystery, and I have to say, the author convinced me with this one. This time around, the characters gelled with me and I was far more interested in them than I was previously. There’s a more pronounced element of romance in this series and I admit I like the dynamic developing between Gordon and Curran.
The mystery plotting was still average, though Stuart masked what would have felt to me to be a transparent crime by mixing in at least two other crimes involving the mix of the same suspects. It worked, for the most part. I wasn’t at all surprised by the murderer, but I wasn’t ever bored with the waiting to find out if I was right or not.
Unfortunately, the author uses this book as a springboard to complications for Curran, and uses the last chapters to setup the direction of the next book. I wouldn’t find this so irritating if I hadn’t bought the book on publication. As it is, I’m finally interested and now have to wait who-knows-how-long before the next one comes out.
All in all, a developing series with promise if you’re looking for an historical mystery series, and enjoy the British variety – but for an historical mystery series that’s dripping with exotic, authentic Singaporean atmosphere, stick with Ovidia Yu’s Su Lin series. Me? I like both – double the reading pleasure! I just have to remember who belongs in where.
This is completely off subject.
How has the whole using the dotorg version of wordpress worked out for you? With the changes wpdotcom slid into everyone’s back this last month I am once again on the lookout to explore other options. I like the social aspect of wp but (and I know I’ve said this many times) the horror stories I hear from selfhosters and the problems I see in the forums, put me off.
I know you’re also being active at the new place and so the blog isn’t as big a thing for you. But I would like your thoughts if you don’t mind.
Ok, this is hilarious, because I just wrote out a LONG reply about how I haven’t had any problems with this .org site and it’s all been great ….
and wordpress ate my reply.
TRYING AGAIN: Both this site and the new place are using wp.org so I’m spending a lot more time with wp than I’d like, since I still think it’s the least of the evil choices out there. But my host, Dreamhost, which I’ve been with for almost 2 decades (sheesh), bundles it with my hosting package, and it’s truly a one click install. This site was super easy, and I keep it super simple – I don’t change templates and I have only what I need plug-in wise to run the site and my book database plug in. So far, comment-eating aside, I haven’t had any issues or anything break on it.
The other site is a lot more complicated; the gang from BookLikes wanted a completely off the grid, private site, plus the book database plugin, plus PM and extended commenting functionality – so a lot of plug ins. I did encounter a few potholes in the setup along the way, but I’ve had excellent luck with Dreamhost tech support – one of the only tech supports I’m willing to deal with, actually – and they got everything straightened out, or told me how to do it myself. That sites been running smoothly now too since December.
Saying all of that, I’d never pay for WordPress and I think the .com users are getting shafted, but overall my .org experience has been as positive as it can be for a system I dislike. That probably has a lot to do with my hosting company, to give credit where it’s due.
Ok, I think that covers all the high points of what got eaten thankyouverymuchwordpress. 🙂
Thanks for taking the time to explain. With the shenanigans dotcom is pulling, self-hosted is looking more and more attractive….
My only advice would be to choose a hosting company carefully. Good luck with whatever you choose. 🙂