I have been in need of some serious escapism these past few weeks and when I was much younger, Agatha Christie was my go-to for escapism reading. I decided to stick with the same genre this time, and dove into Jacqueline Winspear's In this Grave Hour, the second Maisie Dobbs novel I've read (and liked - really liked!). Although the circumstances are heavy - Maisie hires onto her latest murder case on the very day England declares war on Germany - there's nothing too heavy or heady about this book.
So. The Belgian Embassy hires private investigator Maisie following the death of a Belgian refugee from "the last war," who has lived quietly and worked hard right up until he was robbed and murdered in broad daylight, but with no witnesses. Having no leads and diminishing resources (the toll of the nascent war, already), Scotland Yard has given the case short shrift, but the Embassy wants answers...before there is another murder. (Which, c'mon, this being a murder mystery, you know there's going to be.)
I'm realizing belatedly that, unlike Agatha Christie novels which had virtually no continuation of plot themes from one mystery to the next, Winspear has seemingly constructed a series, and what struck me initially as similarities between elements of the plot in both books is actually a continuation of the story. As I will undoubtedly work my way through more of Maisie, I'll have to remember that for the future!
Four stars.
No comments:
Post a Comment