Showing posts with label Lady Julia. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Lady Julia. Show all posts

Wednesday, October 5, 2022

Book Review - Deanna Raybourn's Silent in the Sanctuary

Silent in the Sanctuary by Deanna Raybourn
Published by: Mira Books
Publication Date: January 1st, 2008
Format: Paperback, 489 Pages
Rating: ★★★
To Buy

Lady Julia Grey has been recuperating in Italy after the scandalous events that ended in a fire at her house. Yet staying in Italy with two of her brothers and her newest sister-in-law is starting to wear a little thin. Therefore a summons back to the family estate for Christmas is just what she thinks she needs... though her brother Lysander might disagree as he has gotten married without their father's permission. Bringing along a rather adorable and young Italian count, Julia Grey arrives at the deconsecrated Bellmont Abbey. There not only does she find her rather distant poor relations, Emma and Lucy, ensconced in the house, but Lucy has brought along her fiance, Sir Cedric, with the intention of being married from the Abbey over the holidays. But family is to be expected, and Nicholas Brisbane isn't family. The enigmatic dark knight who she had a previous run in with... and it may have resulted in their lips running into each other, is also at the Abbey after not once contacting her since they solved her husband's murder. She had been trying to forget him and that's hard to do when he shows up for Christmas! Yet here he is affianced and celebrating the holidays with her family. She'll just have to distract herself with Alessandro. She KNEW he would be useful! Yet Julia can sense that her father invited Nicholas for some other reason than just to celebrate the season and Nicholas's unexpected upcoming nuptials... and soon things start to go amiss. The new curate, Lucian Snow, is suspicious of the gypsy encampment on the land, especially when Julia's jewels go missing. It's not long before the long winter nights close in on them and they become snowbound with someone with a mind to murder. Soon Lucian is dead and Lucy is confessing to the crime! Lady Julia knows this is all wrong, which means she'll have to team up with Nicholas to get to the bottom of things before the snow melts. Why can't life be simple?

After the first book in this series I was uncertain as to whether I wanted to pick up the next one. But the fact that I already owned it combined with so many people whose opinion I respect loving this series I was willing to give it another go. I mean, it wasn't that I hated the first book as such... there where redeeming qualities, like Julia's crazy family... and seeing as this was about the holidays with said crazy family, it looked like it would fit the bill. A family, reunited at their crumbling estate for the holidays, when the snow traps them inside with thieves and murderers... and that's just the family members they like, this sounded like my jam and for the most part I heartily enjoyed it. For quite awhile the book had me in it's spell. All the secrets and plots and double crosses. Jewels going missing, a possible ghost, inappropriate liaisons and engagements and marriages. I was in happy little mystery land but then the spell broke. The story went on overly long and started to drag. I date this failing to when the snow melted and they where no longer trapped. There's something delicious about a locked room mystery that loses it's allure once they can just walk free. Because in the end, it's the tension that kept me flipping the pages, and sure, some people would say that the imminent melting of the snow provided the best tension, and I might be willing to agree, but the actual melting, no, because this allowed some of the guilty parties to walk free. While this might be more true to life it does not a satisfying ending make. An ending that wasn't neat or tidy and was too broad and sloppy because while I figured out what was happening Deanna could have derailed my theories yet didn't, instead just using the twist from Agatha Christie's The Adventure of the Christmas Pudding. I call shenanigan's on Deanna Raybourn. While I guess if you're going to steal, steal from the best... but Lady Julia isn't Poirot and Deanna isn't Dame Agatha. Yet.

Friday, April 20, 2012

Book Review - Deanna Raybourn's Silent in the Grave

Silent in the Grave: Lady Julia Book 1 by Deanna Raybourn
Published by: Mira
Publication Date: December 1st, 2007
Format: Paperback, 435 Pages
Rating: ★★
To Buy
Lady Julia Grey meets Nicholas Brisbane for the first time the night her husband Edward dies suddenly. Edward was always a frail man with lingering health problems, so it wasn't a surprise. Julia knew her entire life that Edward would die young. Yet Nicholas Brisbane thinks that Edward may have been hastened to the grave. Edward hired Nicholas before his death because he had been receiving death threats, and discreetly looking into matters of this nature is what Nicholas does. When Nicholas brings this information to Julia, she pushes it aside, not believing that foul play is at work here, only bad genetics. Nicholas' heir, his cousin Simon, is also dying under Julia's roof from the same health complications.

A year later Julia changes her mind about Edward's death. While finally cleaning out his study she stumbles upon one of these death threats and realizes the vitriol that was spewed forth and that perhaps Brisbane was right. Rushing to hire him, she is met with a man who is now all objections. Nicholas Brisbane says it's been too long, there is no chance, yet Julia pushes. Finally they agree to work the case together. Despite many acquaintances and Julia's large and eccentric family, the killer might be closer than either of them thought. Dealing with dangerous Romanies, health complications, degenerate footmen, and an unwelcome feathered visitor, is what it will take to find the answer to the death of Edward Grey. The clues are all there if only Julia would see.

I am sick of widows! No, seriously people. Stop having widows be the heroines of your Victorian series. This is symptomatic of an underlying genre crutch. A woman of this time period would have no independence unless she was widowed, therefore, windows run wild. I really don't think there could possibly be that many widows solving crime during the reign of Queen Victoria. Or that many husbands conveniently dying to have this many windows. Just take window add single, slightly unsavory man, have them solve some crime, if it's the first in the series, have them solve the death of window's husband, and viola. I picked up Silent in the Grave because felicitously I had it on my shelf and it was the book for my Vaginal Fantasy Hangout Book Club in February. Let's put it this way... I was so dispirited by the formulaic nature of the book that I didn't join in the discussion on our book club night and in fact opted to do homework. Yes, I chose homework versus talking about a book. There is a first time for everything.

There where many non-conventional elements that I liked. Julia's eccentric family that has been very odd for centuries, and willing accepts that being gay is just what you are. No one offers any objections to her sister's lifestyle, which is oddly refreshing. Also the underlying Romany Culture was fascinating and, I will admit, will entrance me almost every time. Add in just a dash of mysticism, and I'm hooked. So, there where things that made this book unique, just not enough.

Now let me get to Nicholas. Ah, Mr. Brisbane. You are unkempt, ill mannered, have a few dark secrets, have multiple addictions to illicit substances, really have nothing that would appeal to a woman, and have more than a few things in common with Sherlock Holmes. In fact, it's rather odd HOW much you have in common with Sherlock Holmes... in fact, the Robert Downey Junior version to be precise. I don't know if it was coincidence, or if the newest Sherlock Holmes was just borrowing heavily from this book, which came out two years prior to the movie... but there where so many similarities I was shocked. The smokey/purple glasses where the first hint, then the fight in the Romany tent... WOW. It was quite literally the fight at the beginning of Sherlock Holmes... so, here you go, Nicholas Brisbane in the living flesh, glasses and all:

There is only one mystery left to solve. Will I pick up the next one? Probably. I now have no expectations, so perhaps I will enjoy it more.

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