Reading this remembrance
of Angela Lansbury this week took me back to my grandparents’ house in Arkansas
where the tv always seemed to be loudly playing Murder She Wrote. It was also at my grandmother’s house that I first
discovered Agatha Christie. I still love a good mystery, and if it’s a little
quirky, so much the better. Today’s repost reminds me of an author I need to
revisit, Emily Arsenault.
Not since reading the Flavia de Luce mysteries,
have I been so intrigued by the amateur sleuths that crop up in Emily
Arsenault's books.
In What Strange Creatures, Theresa
Battle writes copy for a candle company catalog by day and procrastinates
writing her dissertation by night. When her brother is arrested for the murder
of his girlfriend, she tries to prove his innocence. By seeking out the
girlfriend’s current and former acquaintances she often draws inspiration from
her dissertation subject, Margery Kempe. Weaving Kempe’s story with Theresa’s,
Arsenault ventures to ask us to examine our own vocations.
Miss Me When I’m Gone centers around Gretchen Waters, the author
of Tammyland, a memoir of the author’s love of female country
music stars. When Gretchen turns up dead after a reading, everyone
is shocked, including Jamie, her best friend from college. Gretchen’s mother
asks Jamie to be her literary executor and turns over the journals, files, and
notes Gretchen was working from for her second book. Originally intended to be
a book about the men of country music, Jamie discovers that this second book is
actually Gretchen’s attempt to find out more about the identity of her father.
As Jamie pieces together the notes left behind, she travels into Gretchen’s
past and finds out more than the murderer bargained for.
The Broken Teaglass follows two
young dictionary editors as they start finding random citations from a
mysteriously quirky story called The Broken Teaglass. As
the excerpts turn up out of order, they intriguingly reveal a corpse, a guilty
conscience, and a love affair all set in the very dictionary offices from which
they are working. What could be better than a novel that combines unrequited
love, murder, and words? Arsenault builds up the suspense with each excerpt,
and helpfully puts them all in order in the later chapters revealing that
context matters.
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