David Baldacci’s last
novel was a stand alone called “One Good Deed” which was an historical novel
taking place in 1949. Historical mystery novels are very popular and very prolific.
I enjoy a good historical where the times they are set in come to life and
become an important character in the book. When it is obvious that the author
takes time to research the time the book is set in and it feels authentic then
the book and characters really come alive.
Reading right now:
“The Wolf and the Watchman”
by Niklas Natt och Dag which is a mystery set in 1793 in Stockholm where a
mutilated corpse is discovered in a local swamp. Watchman Mikel Cardell and lawyer
Cecil Winge combine their skills to uncover the murderer before someone else
dies.
Oscar De
Muriel’s Frey and McGray series takes place in 1880s England. “Loch of the Dead”
is the fourth book in this series. While the series has two fairly standard
police detectives as the heroes, the time period allows the books to feel
Gothic with a twist of romance and terror. A fine series and a great fourth novel
in the series which was nominated for the McIlvanney Prize.
Erin
Lindsey’s Rose Gallagher series takes place in Gilded Age Manhattan. Gallagher
is a Pinkerton who deals with paranormal cases. In the second book of the
series, “A Golden Grave” finds Gallagher and her partner trying to solve the
murder of six delegates to a local political convention where the next victim
could well be Theodore Roosevelt.
Bella
Ellis’ debut novel is the first in the new Bronte Sisters series which takes
place in 1800s England and make the three Bronte Sisters into amateur
detectives ("The Vanished Bride"). I’ve mentioned this book before, but it belongs in historical
mysteries and deserves another comment. Don’t miss the fun.
Others to
watch out for include the Nicholas Meyers latest historical mystery where he revisits
John Watson of Sherlock Holmes fame. This is the fourth book in the series which
is called “From the Memoirs of John H. Watson.” The first book in the series
was called “The Seven Percent Solution” and came out in 1974 and the latest is called "The Adventures of the Peculiar Protocols."
John
Farrow’s “Ball Park” is the seventh book in the Detective Emile Cinq-Mars
series which takes place in Montreal in 1975. Raymond Benson’s stand along
novel is a 1940s Hollywood Crime novel called “Blues in the Dark.” Frances
Brody’s eleventh novel in the Kate Shackleton series is “The Body on the Train.”
Our hero is a female amateur detective in 1920s England. Also watch for Victoria
Thompson’s latest and Charles Todd’s new historical.
Other
Mysterious Things:
After
years of writing two very famous historical series, Anne Perry finally has a
new series which just came out with photographer Elena Standish as the hero in
1930s Europe. Hopefully Perry will find inspiration with this new character.
No comments:
Post a Comment