Book Review Club: Maisie Dobbs by Jacqueline Winspear

Barrie Summy’s Book Review Club is back from summer vacation, and my choice for review is a favorite mystery, Maisie Dobbs by Jacqueline Winspear.

Maisie Dobbs coverMaisie Dobbs (Maisie Dobbs Mysteries Series Book 1)
by Jacqueline Winspear
Soho Crime, 2003

Maisie Dobbs is one of the most fascinating and memorable characters I’ve come across in a while. When we first meet her, she is a private investigator setting up her own business in 1929 London, an unusual profession for a woman. We also learn that she was after was a battlefield nurse during World War I. It soon becomes clear that she is extremely smart as well as insightful and compassionate. Her first client is a man who thinks his wife is having an affair. Twice a week she leaves home and no one knows where she has gone. When Maisie follows the wife, she tracks her to a cemetery on the outskirts of London where she tends the grave of a man called simply Vincent. She learns from a caretaker that Vincent was horribly disfigured during the war and committed suicide. In searching for more information about Vincent, Maisie discovers a terrible secret.

In the middle of the book, we flash back to Maisie’s past. The daughter of a London costermonger (vegetable seller), Maisie was a bright child with the potential to rise above her station and perhaps become a teacher–a high aspiration for a young girl in the early 1900s. Her mother’s death and subsequent medical bills put a halt to this plan, and her father reluctantly decides that thirteen-year-old Maisie must go into service. She is taken on as an under maid by Lady Rowan. One of Maisie’s jobs is to light the fires in the morning, including in the library. She falls in love with the room and decides to get up at 3 AM and read before it’s time to start work. One night, Lady Rowan, her husband, and their friend Dr. Maurice Blanche come home late. Lady Rowan goes to the library and finds Maisie there trying to teach herself Latin. Lady Rowan is astounded by her young maid’s ambition and intelligence, so she and Dr. Blanche decide to make Maisie their project. Dr. Blanche tutors her so she can go to college. But war breaks out after one year of college and she trains as a nurse. She also falls in love with a young captain in the medical corps. But he is obviously not part of the main story, and we don’t know what happened to him until the end.

I really loved this book. The mystery was very interesting and unveiled slowly but with rising tension. Though the war has been over for eleven years, its effects still linger. The characters are interesting and shown with more depth than is typical in many cozy mysteries. I’ll gladly read more in this series.

Click on the graphic below for more great reviews from the members of Barrie Summy’s Book Review Club.

Linda

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@Barrie Summy

Book Review: A Duty to the Dead

I did so much reading this summer, I’m going to post reviews more regularly this fall, starting with A Duty to the Dead by Charles Todd.

Duty to the Dead coverA Duty to the Dead (Bess Crawford Mysteries Book 1)
by Charles Todd
William Morrow, 2009

Bess Crawford is the onlyl daughter of a British Army officer, so she felt it her duty to volunteer to be a nurse during World War I. The book starts with Bess on the deck of the steamship Britannic just before it hits a mine and starts to sink. The initial explosion knocks Bess off her deck chair and she breaks her arm. The break and cut are bad enough that she is sent home to England to recover. While there, she decides to follow up on a request made of her by Arthur Graham, a dying officer. He asked her to deliver a message to his brother: Tell Jonathan that I lied. I did it for Mother’s sake. But it has to be set right.”

Back home, Bess contacts Jonathan who invites her to visit the Graham home. She delivers the message, but still doesn’t understand what it means. She knows it hs something to do with Arthur’s brothers–Jonathan, Timothy and their half-brother, Peregrine, who has been locked up in an asylum for years. Her stay becomes extended when Peregrine, arrives from the asylum with a bad case of pneumonia, and Bess seems to be ther only one who wants him to live. She is nothing if not a dedicated nurse.

This is a pretty good mystery, and the sense of time and place is excellent. The war casts a shadow over everyone. Bess knows she will be sent back as soon as she is healed, as does Jonathan who is home recuperating from his war wounds. And his brother Timothy is shamed by the fact that he is unfit to serve due to a club foot. Bess uses her nursing skills on more than one occasion. There are seven books in this series, and I’ll probably read more.

What have you been reading lately?