Showing posts with label Sherlock Holmes (fictitious character). Show all posts
Showing posts with label Sherlock Holmes (fictitious character). Show all posts

Wednesday, April 20, 2016

The Murder of Mary Russell by Laurie R. King

The Murder of Mary Russell: A Novel of Suspense Featuring Mary Russell and Sherlock Holmes by Laurie R. King --- 359 pages

The fifteenth book in the brilliant series featuring Sherlock Holmes and his wife Mary Russell.  It's 1925 and Russell and Holmes are just returned to their quiet Sussex home after thier latest international intrigue. Holmes is away and Mrs Hudson, the housekeeper, has gone out to do the shopping, leaving Mary home alone to enjoy the peace and quiet.  Then a stranger arrives at the door, claiming to be Mrs. Hudson's longlost son from Australia.  Mary didn't know Mrs. Hudson had a son; that's the first clue that something about this situation is wrong.

Sometime later, Mrs. Hudson arrives, to find the house empty, the smell of gun powder, signs of a struggle, blood pooled on the floor in the parlor, and --- Mary missing.

Sherlock Holmes knows the key to his wife's fate lies in a deadly secret hidden in the long-buried past of his respectable housekeeper.

Once again, King takes a few minor threads from the Holmesian canon and weaves together a whole new perspective on the tale of the world's first consulting detective.

Click HERE to read a review from the Christian Science Monitor.

Click HERE to read a review from Kirkus.



 

Thursday, February 26, 2015

Dreaming Spies by Laurie R. King

Dreaming Spies: A Novel of Suspense Featuring Mary Russell and Sherlock Holmes by Laurie R. King --- 331 pages

 The adventure begins on a cool spring afternoon in Sussex. Mary Russell and Sherlock Holmes have just returned home from Lisbon to find a peculiar addition to their garden: a distinctive stone they last saw in the Imperial gardens in Kyoto.

The stone reminds them of  another adventure one that ended tragically. On their way back from India, en route to San Francisco to sort out Russell's family affairs, the couple encounters a young Japanese woman who asks their help in foiling a blackmailer. Only after Russell and Holmes agree do they discover that the blackmailer's target is the Prince Regent Hirohito of Japan.

The most entertaining part of the book consists of Russell and Holmes' up close and personal encounters with daily life in the rural villages of 1924 Japan, as they travel the Nakasendo Road up the Kiso Valley, from the town of Arima to the village of Mojiro-joku, in the guise of Buddhist pilgrims.  Also interesting are the descriptions of the Bodleian Library and its librarians in Oxford.

The seventeenth century itinerant poet and master of haiku is frequently invoked in these pages, as is Shakespeare's Sir John Falstaff of Henry the Fourth and Fifth, and the English poet Matthew Arnold, whose "dreaming spires" of Oxford become the punning title of this book in a sly reference to the Japanese speaker's difficulties in pronouncing the letter "r" in English.

This is the thirteenth book in the Mary Russell series, but chronologically this one fills the previous gap between The Game (No. Seven), and Locked Rooms (No. Eight) and it;s immediate sequel, The Language of Bees (No. Nine).

Click HERE to read an interview with Laurie R. King in the San Francisco Examiner.

Click HERE to view the book trailer for Dreaming Spies on Youtube.

Saturday, September 29, 2012

Garment of Shadows by Laurie R. King

Garment of Shadows: A Novel of Suspense Featuring Mary Russell and Sherlock Holmes --- 266 pages

Following immediately on the heels of her previous book, Pirate King, it is 1924 and Russell and Holmes are still in the French protectorate of Morocco. Holmes has gone to visit his distant cousin, Marechal Hubert Lyautey, the French Resident General who administers the protectorate, while Russell finished her commitment to Fflytte Films. But when he returns to meet Russell as agreed he discovers that she left the film encampment suddenly in the night, in the company of a young native boy, abandoning her luggage, and leaving just a brief note to say she was going to the city of Fez. And there has been no word since.

While Holmes returns to Fez to hunt for his wife, Russell awakens in a strange room, with a pounding head and no memory of who she is. But she has blood on her hands, fragmented recollections of violence and pain and loss, and a conviction that her life is in danger from enemies that lurk in the shadows.

Morocco is a troubled land, split between the competing colonial powers of France and Spain, with rich iron deposits that a powerful German company wants to exploit. The Rif tribes, Berbers from the mountains, are fighting to establish an autonomous Republic; meanwhile a notorious bandit is pushing his claim to the throne of Morocco. And who should Russell and Holmes discover in the midst of all this intrigue but their friends and comrades from Palestine, ( see Oh Jerusalem! and Justice Hall) Mahmoud and Ali Hzar, undercover agents for Holmes' brother Mycroft and the British government.

King manages to insert Russell and Holmes very convincingly into the historical intrigues of colonialism, left to fester unresolved in the aftermath of World War I, inexorably sweeping the world into the maelstrom of another cataclysmic conflict.