Cons: Mystery wanders a bit at times; dark
The Bottom Line:
Scrooge sees his first ghost
Leads him down murderous path
In dark mystery
Scrooge’s First Encounter with a Ghost was Murder
My mom loves A
Christmas Carol, so I’ve grown up very familiar with the story and love it
myself now. Every year, I still usually
see a couple of different versions of it, in fact. So when The Humbug Murders crossed my radar, the first in a series with Ebenezer
Scrooge as the sleuth, I was naturally very curious.
It’s the week before Christmas in 1833, and Scrooge is in
his favorite place in the world – his counting house. His old mentor and friend, Fezziwig, pays him
a visit, and his entire world changes.
Fezziwig claims that he has been murdered. Then he issues a warning – three more will
die before Scrooge himself is murdered.
Just as Fezziwig vanishes, the police show up and take
Scrooge to the crime scene. Sure enough,
Fezziwig has been murdered and quite brutally.
The body was found by four people who were all summoned by Fezziwig to
show up that morning. They claim to not
know each other. Do they have anything
in common? Why would someone want to
kill Fezziwig? Can Scrooge figure out
what is happening before the ghost’s warning comes true?
While this book is set long before A Christmas Carol with a Scrooge who is in his 30’s, there are
plenty of references that those familiar with the classic Christmas tale will
love. Those references never felt forced
into the story and we often went a long time without any, but they were a
complete delight when they showed up.
I must confess that my knowledge of Dickens outside this
book is very limited, but I did know enough to recognize some of the other
supporting players who showed up, including Pickwick, Fagan, and the Artful
Dodger. In a much larger role, we get a
young investigative reporter name…Charles Dickens. That was another fun touch.
The mystery did seem to wander a bit, but most everything
came back into play by the end of the mystery.
There was one development that didn’t seem to lead anywhere, but maybe
it will be played up in the sequel.
While I don’t know for sure what the plot of that one will revolve
around, I have a feeling it was set up in the closing pages of this book. (But no, the ending isn’t a cliffhanger.)
I did find Scrooge wasn’t quite the cold hearted man I
expected him to be. I guess I was
expecting the man at the beginning of A
Christmas Carol, but it is more logical that he hadn’t quite grown into
that mantel yet. Still, we can easily
see him growing into that man from what we get here. The other characters were all good and
well-rounded by the end. I don’t know
how faithful any of the other Dickens characters were to their real personas,
but they certainly fit into this book well.
Many years ago, I had listened to a radio drama that
involved all the classic characters from A
Christmas Carol in a murder mystery – one with Scrooge as the victim. I hated it because it really twisted some of
the characters into people I didn’t like.
I was a bit worried about that here, but I am glad to say I didn’t feel
that happened. I am a bit sad at the
idea of Fezziwig being murdered, but I had no problem moving past that as the
book progressed.
Having said that, this book is definitely darker than I
normally enjoy. The violence is more
graphic, and some sex comes into play as the story progresses. Honestly, that was the part of the story that
bothered me the most. This isn’t a fun,
light Christmas mystery but a darker, grittier mystery.
The Humbug Murders is an interesting take on a classic literary character. I’m glad I read it to satisfy my
curiosity. And if you are okay with a
darker take on the character and darker mysteries, you might enjoy it as well.
Interesting! I guess it makes sense that it's a dark grittier mystery as the world The Christmas Carol takes place in is pretty dark and gritty. I probably would've preferred a light mystery but this does sound good. I like that the characters felt true to who they were in the original book. Great review! I think I'd enjoy this one.
ReplyDeleteYou are right that A Christmas Carol isn't exactly a light world is it. I hadn't thought much about that.
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