#3 Miss Clara Vale Mysteries
Pages: 300
Publisher:
Embla Books
Release
Date: June 13, 2024
Blurb
A night at the museum, a dead body and a trail to Cairo. Sounds like a case for Miss Clara Vale!
1930: Miss Clara Vale, chemistry major turned detective, is taking a night off
from sleuthing to attend the launch party of a new exhibition at the Hancock
Museum in Newcastle. But when the piece de resistance, a rare ornate
sarcophagus, is finally opened and it turns out the mummy inside it is a fake
it looks like there is no rest for Clara after all...
Later that night, she is summoned back to the museum and asked to investigate a
series of stolen Egyptian artefacts. Using her scientific and forensic prowess,
Clara, with her trusted assistant Bella in tow, embarks on a trail that will
lead from Newcastle to London and along the river Nile to Cairo.
But she is not the only person hunting for stolen antiquities and when she
uncovers an international smuggling ring with a penchant for murder, it becomes
clear that Clara's own life is in danger too.
Can Clara catch the smugglers before they get away with another murder among
the pyramids?
Review
This is my second Miss Clara Vale Mystery. Last year I read and reviewed The Pantomime Murders. I ended that review with the words: ‘I’ve got a feeling I’ll be spending more time with Miss Clara Vale in the future’, and what do you know, just over six months later I find myself solving mysteries with the spunky lady investigator once again.
The year is 1930 and Clara, our heroine, has donated some of her deceased uncle’s Egyptian artifacts and papers to a local museum. But what should have been a joyous occasion soon turns sour when she discovers a mummy that is very recent as well as a selection of Egyptian jewels that shouldn’t even be in England, never mind in her local museum.
When she’s asked to investigate it isn’t long before she finds herself on a journey to Egypt where she soon encounters danger as the plot thickens.
There is so much to enjoy in this book. The mystery is intriguing, Clara Vale is a wonderful MC, as is Bessie her assistant and there isn’t a dull moment in the story. This story is properly set in 1930. For example, there is mention of Dr. Fleming and penicillin, the start of (commercial) air travel, and most delightfully, Agatha Christie makes an appearance when Clara is in Egypt. The author’s biography states that Fiona Veitch Smith is a huge fan of the Golden Age of Mystery stories, and her books show that clearly.
I love Clara Vale’s independence which was still rare and mostly unheard of in the early decades of the 20th century.
The Pyramid Murders was well written and filled with detail without ever dragging. The characters are vivid, and the mystery is very well-plotted. Which means I’ll end this review as I did my review of The Pantomime Murders. I will be spending more time with Miss Clara Vale in the future. And while I wait for book #4 to be published, I'll go back and read The Picture House Murders, the first title in this series.
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