I read three wonderful books this past week
I picked up No Comfort for the Undertaker at the Albany Book Festival.
This debut novel by Chris Keeper is really good. It follows a recently widowed Carrie Lisbon, a female undertaker in a time when women simply did not take on such jobs. She has moved in with her uncle in upstate New York. Before she unpacks her things, a bereaved family asks her to lay out their daughter, a child who drowned.
Soon after, she is asked to lay out the body of a young woman whose injuries are not consistent with her husband’s explanation of the death.
The characters are well drawn and there are several side stories happening at the same time as the mystery.
This does not have the macabre elements of Christine Trent’s Lady of Ashes, a great book (and series) itself but is a straight mystery. Highly Recommended.
I also read number 26 in Victoria Thompson’s Gaslight series: Murder on Bedford Street.
Hugh Breedlove approaches Frank Malloy for help in getting his niece, Julia, released from an insane asylum where she has been wrongfully committed by her husband Chet Longley. Although Breedlove seems more committed to promoting his daughter’s entry into society than protecting his niece, Frank and Sarah agree to help him for the sake of Julia and the young son she left behind.
They soon discover there were several mysterious deaths at the Longley home.
These gaslight mysteries are always enjoyable and fun and this one is no exception.
Lastly, I read The Quarry Girls by Jess Lourey.
Heather, Brenda and Victoria have been friends since childhood but Heather feels everything is changing. Victoria and Brenda are different, interested in boys and clothes and with a secret Heather doesn’t share.
Then Victoria disappears and her body is pulled out of the quarry. Soon after, Brenda’s body is also discovered in the quarry. No one seems interested in finding the murderer, not the cops or the FBI.
Heather, who has seem something terrible in the tunnels below the town, can’t help but ask questions. She uncovers long dormant secrets that lay bare the corruption in the small town and put her own life in danger.
I couldn’t put this down and read it in one sitting.