Historical Mystery

  • The Twylight Tower

    While I enjoy mysteries and love Elizabethan history and politics, I have to say that The Twylight Tower never really got off the ground for me. It manages to be interesting without being engaging, and the pacing is entirely too slow for a story involving multiple mysterious murders that seem to be pointing to an…

  • Deadly Affairs by Brenda Joyce

    Brenda Joyce’s latest Francesca Cahill installment purports to be a historical mystery, but “historical soap opera” may be just as apt a description. There were so many characters to keep track of in this turn of the century whodunit, all involved in their own little (and not so little) subplots, that I often felt like…

  • Deadly Pleasure by Brenda Joyce

    It’s a good thing Brenda Joyce keeps telling us just how smart heroine Francesca Cahill is, because otherwise the reader might have good cause to wonder. For instance, in Deadly Pleasure, the second in Joyce’s Francesca Cahill series, our heroine keeps critical information from the police, gets into the middle of a serious marital disagreement…

  • A Mischief in the Snow

    In the first book of the Braceridge series, the victim died by spontaneously combusting. It’s a method that immediately piqued the reader’s interest, which was further held by a well-written plot. In this, the fourth in the series, the murder method isn’t nearly as intriguing and sadly, neither is the plot. The time is 1766…

  • The Tidal Poole

    Many books (some of them mysteries) are set in Elizabethan England but there aren’t any others that can claim to have Queen Elizabeth herself doing the investigating. What amazed me in Karen Harper’s first historical mystery, The Poyson Garden and this one, is that Elizabeth’s sleuthing actually makes sense. She has formed a Privy Plot…

End of content

End of content