Oxford theologian Mary Russell, now living quietly in Sussex with
her husband Sherlock Holmes, is thunderstruck with the explosive
potential of a document her old acquaintance, amateur archeologist
Dorothy Ruskin, brings her from a dig in Palestine: a letter from
one Mariam of Magdala identifying herself as an apostle of Jesus.
What would the Church say to the possibility of a woman having been
a full-fledged apostle? What might the letter do for our
understanding of Mary Magdalene? And what to make of the
persistently unvoiced parallels between Russell and her storied
progenitor? Soon after leaving Russell and Holmes, Dorothy Ruskin
is killed in a traffic accident her hosts prove was murder as they
fall into a scramble for Miss Ruskin's meager possessions - and
into a long, keen disappointment for fans of King's distinctively
feminist Sherlockian pastiches (A Monstrous Regiment of Women,
1995, etc.). Plotting has never been King's strong suit (as it
never was Conan Doyle's), but, here, her episodic story - Russell
and Holmes going as spies into the houses of suspects whose
personalities pale before the richness of the inspectors' before
allowing Holmes to produce one of his most gratuitous final coups -
is surprisingly unworthy of her richly suggestive premise. Fans
will find all of King's accustomed literacy and empathy on display.
But, like Amanda Cross, she seems bent this time on crossing the
line from the detective story to the discursive essay. Even Holmes
is muffled. (Kirkus Reviews)
Third in Laurie King's popular Mary Russell crime series:
'Beguiling variation on Sherlock Holmes sequels...civilised,
ingenious and engrossing' - Literary Review August, 1923. The quiet
in the Holmes household in Sussex is shaken when Dorothy Ruskin, an
amateur archaeologist from the Holy Land, appears with an exquisite
inlaid box containing a scrap of ancient writing. Miss Ruskin soon
dies in a traffic accident that Holmes and Mary prove was murder.
But what was the motivation? Was it the little inlaid box holding
the manuscript? Or the woman's involvement in the volatile politics
of the Holy Land? Or could it have been the manuscript itself - a
letter seemingly written by Mary Magdalene that contains a biblical
bombshell. Beautifully written and steeped in authentic period
detail, A Letter of Mary is a fascinating and intelligent read.
General
Imprint: |
HarperCollinsPublishers
|
Country of origin: |
United Kingdom |
Release date: |
February 2001 |
Authors: |
Laurie R. King
|
Dimensions: |
178 x 111 x 23mm (L x W x T) |
Format: |
Paperback - Mass Market
|
Pages: |
352 |
Edition: |
New Ed |
ISBN-13: |
978-0-00-651085-7 |
Categories: |
Books >
Fiction >
Genre fiction >
Crime & mystery >
General
|
LSN: |
0-00-651085-X |
Barcode: |
9780006510857 |
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