Archive for the ‘Historical Mystery’ Category

Review: City of Silver by Annamaria Alfieri

Thursday, January 7th, 2010

alfieri_cityofsilver.jpgCity of Silver
by Annamaria Alfieri
Minotaur Books, August 2009, $24.99

For true torture and torment, you can’t beat the Spanish Inquisition. In this historical mystery set in 1650, its tentacles have reached the Spanish Viceroyalty of Peru and the city of Potosi (now Bolivia), one of the 17th century’s great metropolises thanks to the riches of its vast silver mines. The spunky Mother Maria Santa Hilda, abbess of the Convent of Santa Isabella de los Santos Milagros, is the heroine of this story of corruption at the highest levels of government.

When it is found that the silver being coined in Potosi is not pure, the King of Spain sends prosecutor Dr. Francisco de Nestares to ferret out the culprits. Meanwhile, at the convent, Inez de la Morada, the daughter of one of the richest politicians in the city, dies while in the care of the abbess. Although some of the clues suggest suicide, Mother Maria Santa Hilda and the sisters believe otherwise and endeavor to prove the true cause of the girl’s death.

The author has certainly done her research in this debut mystery rich in atmosphere and full of intriguing characters, including the ultra-rich mine owner Antonio De Bermeo y de Novarra Tovar, and the always-squabbling churchmen and politicians. Once the reader gets past the daunting names of the Spanish characters and places, there are lots of twists and treachery in this mystery with a touch of romance.

Linda L. Richards and the economy

Thursday, April 16th, 2009

“In this economy…”

OK, so how many times a day do you hear this phrase from newscasters, friends, waiters, sales people or even just floating through your brain like some modern-day mantra.

Makes you wish you had the theme song to The Beverly Hillbillies instead of this terror-inducing phrase in your head.

lindar.jpgHopefully, “in this economy….” will not stop you from buying books, preferably mysteries, and mystery-oriented magazines.

So it should come as no surprise how Linda L. Richards’s newest Kitty Pangborn novel Death Was in the Picture feels so contemporary, even though the novel is set in 1930.

But what’s a Great Depression between friends?

Richards’s heroine Kitty has to deal with some of the same financial situations that her readers do in reality.

Sure, the financially strapped hero/heroine is a staple of the mystery genre.

Very few sleuths are wealthy, unless they are a Lord or something.

But very few exist in an economy that we have now.

Can you say Bernie Madoff?

Kitty came from a fairly affluent family, but the 1929 crash hit her family hard. Her father committed suicide.

While she still lives in the family home, she takes in boarders to make ends meet.
deathwas.jpg

The scenes in which Kitty saves money, trims little things here and there will hit home with many readers.

When she is given money by a client to buy new clothes, she’s both giddy with excitement and frightened by spending all that cash on just clothes, instead of, say, for food.

In Mystery Scene’s Winter Issue 2009 (No. 108), Kevin Burton Smith presents an insightful article about Richards, delving into how she made the secretary to a private detective the lead character.

I, too, found this quite interesting. (By the way, here’s a link to my review of Death Was in the Picture.)

After all, most of us – well, we women readers anyway – knew that Effie Perrine, Della Street and Peggy (on Mannix) were the real reasons those private detectives were so successful.

Like many mystery writers, Linda L. Richards includes a lot of layers in her novels.

And like most historical mysteries, her plots are a mirror to contemporary times.