Stars: 5 out of 5
Pros: Strong mystery, interesting main characters
Cons: Supporting characters a little on the weak side
The Bottom Line:
This car crash was no
Accident. Complicated
Case well worth reading
It Definitely Wasn’t an Accident
When I started reading Barbara Ross, I started with her
Maine Clambake Mysteries, always intending to go back and some point and read The Death of an Ambitious Woman, her
first mystery. It’s taken longer than I
intended, but I enjoyed it as much as I thought I would.
Unlike her series, this book is set in a small town in
Massachusetts and focuses on interim Police Chief Ruth Murphy. As the book opens, she’s been acting as the
police chief for several months, and it is looking likely that she is about to
officially get the promotion.
However, things in town are about to heat up with a car
crash. Tracey Kendall is discovered
after she crashes into a wall along a road on the outskirts of town. She was driving very fast, and the lack of
skid marks make it obvious she didn’t try to stop at all. Things get more interesting when the mechanic
who serviced her car disappears. The
more Ruth and her detectives investigate, the more pressure she faces to drop
the case. Will pursuing the truth cost
her the promotion? What really happened?
I went into this book expecting an excellent mystery, and I
wasn’t disappointed in the slightest.
There were plenty of complications both in the form of red herrings and
in the form of local politics. Yes, Ruth
has made some enemies over the years, and those bad relationships also come
into play as she searches for the truth.
Not that Ruth lets that stop her.
The climax is ultimately satisfying and wraps things up perfectly.
We get to know Ruth and a few members of her staff very
well. The key players in the mystery are
also strong characters. There are a
number of smaller players that I must admit I had a hard time keeping straight,
but when they show up again, we were given enough context to remember who they
are and how they relate to the mystery.
The book does have a few four-letter words scattered
throughout, and we get a few descriptions of violence that are slightly more
detailed than you would find in a typical cozy.
Even though this is flirting with the edges of the cozy/traditional/soft boiled
subgenres, I’m sure that most fans of Barbara’s work will still really enjoy
it.
For now, this book is a standalone. However, I think there are more stories to
tell with Ruth, and if Barbara Ross ever did go back to the character, I’d
definitely want to read more.
I’m glad to have finally reading The Death of an Ambitious Woman.
Any fan of well written mysteries will be glad to have picked up this
excellent debut mystery.
This review is part of this week's Friday's Forgotten Books.
This review is part of this week's Friday's Forgotten Books.
I also loved this book when I read it after it first came out. Barb is a master storyteller, then and now!
ReplyDeleteI had to go to the state library to find this one and put it on my list. It sounded good enough to do that. It also came in large print!
ReplyDeleteI thoroughly enjoyed this book and would love to read more books with Chief Ruth as the main character. It was definitely less cozy than her Maine Clambake series but I think all Barbara Ross readers would enjoy it.
ReplyDelete