Thursday, September 19, 2019

Evans Above by Rhys Bowen *****

Evan Evans is a Police Constable in the North Wales village of Llanfair. He has no gun and no car. He is expected to walk the village and respond to calls from Mrs. Powell-Jones reporting that someone has stolen her prize tomatoes. When two men apparently fall to their death on Snowdon mountain, none of the official detectives are interested in his theory that they were murdered. He is not easily discouraged.

In addition to receiving no respect for HQ, the entire town is working to get Evans married. The two leading candidates are Betsy, the sexually forward barmaid from the Red Dragon Pub. The village seems to have two churches and a single pub. The second candidate is the local schoolteacher, Bronwen Price, who keep arriving when the shy Evans has failed to discourage the forward Betsy. This is the comic relief.

Evans Above by Rhys Bowen is book one in a ten-book series.

A murder mystery where a simple accident becomes more and more complex as the story unfolds.

Check out https://amazon.com/shop/influencer-20171115075 for book recommendations. 

Friday, September 13, 2019

The Tales of Two Bullies ***

The Bookshop by Penelope Fitzgerald and The Legend of Sleepy Hollow by Washington Irving are two books, both written long ago (1978, 1820) with similar stories. In both books, the sympathetic protagonist is thoroughly defeated by an arrogant bully. Florence Green purchased the Old House to run a bookshop in the small town of Hardborough. The hapless Ichabod Crane is the country schoolmaster who organized the church choir in his spare time (instructs psalmody). Both of these gentle souls acquire the enmity of powerful people, almost by accident. In both cases these rivals destroy them.

The Bookshop is a story of privilege and power. Once Florence Green purchases the Old House for her bookshop, Mrs. Violet Gamart decides she wants the building for an Art Centre. Florence refuses to sell.

Mrs. Gamart’s campaign to put Florence out of business includes forcing her assistant to fail the 11+ examination. How serious is this? The girl’s mother explains: “She’s the first of ours not to get to the Grammar. It‘s what we call a death sentence…she’ll be pegging out her own washing until the day she dies.”

One source of bookshop income was a lending library supported by subscriptions. “The lending library, which after all had been a steady if modest source of income, was now closed for good. This was because for the first time in [Hardborough’s] history a Public Library had been established.”

Ultimately, Mrs. Gamart’s nephew pushed a Private Bill through Parliament that allowed the town council to condemn the Old House and acquire it for nothing. The stock went to the bank to cover the mortgage, leaving Florence Green penniless. The story ends with the bully’s judgment that Florence brought this upon herself. “As the train drew out of the station, she sat with her head bowed in shame, because the town in which she lived for nearly ten years had not wanted a bookshop.”

The Legend of Sleepy Hollow is a story of a gentle schoolmaster aspiring for the hand of the most desirable young woman in the area, a Dutch heiress, “the lovely and wealthy Katrina Van Tassel.” His rival is “Brom Van Brundt, the hero of the country round, which rung with his feats of strength and hardihood.” Ultimately Brom frightens Ichabod away.  The narrator blames this ending on Ichabod: “That there is no situation but has its advantages and pleasures, provided we will but take a joke as we find it.” This is the response of contemporary bullies when they ask, “Can’t you take a joke?” The conclusion is so unpleasant that the tale closes with a repeat of the “just joking” excuse: “Faith, sir,” replied the storyteller, “as to that matter, I don’t believe one half of it myself.”

(Both stories have supernatural elements.)

Two stories without morals or justice. If you are good and mind your own business, you can still be attacked and destroyed. 

Monday, September 9, 2019

Sea People by Christina Thompson *****

Sea People by Christina Thompson documents the current solution to the “problem of Polynesian origins.” The problem addresses “the Polynesian Triangle, an area of ten million square miles in the middle of the Pacific Ocean,” bigger than North America and 99.9% water. The European explorers took three centuries to fully discover some thousand scattered islands. The questions about who the Polynesians were have been hindered by prejudice and arrogance. Today (published 2019) “the latest science brings us closer to the oral history of the Polynesians.”

Polynesia consists of high islands (volcanic peaks) and low islands (reefs).

Tupaia of the Society Islands accompanied Cook to New Zealand. This provided one of the first hints that all the Polynesian peoples were related. Tupaia and the Maori of New Zealand could understand each other, even though their homes were separated by a distance of over 2,500 miles of open ocean.

Somehow the irony that Western civilization expected Polynesian oral traditions to be literally factual when this was not demanded of the Bible seemed completely missed by everyone.

Two advances in the latter half of the twentieth century clarified the situation on Polynesia. (1) Carbon-14 dating. This technology took the guesswork and uncertainty out of the timeline. Interestingly, the verified time lime more closely matched the timeline derived from the oral histories than from competing scholarship. (2) Polynesian Voyaging Society. In this time, voyages were made across wide expanses of the Pacific (e.g., Hawaii to Tahiti) using no western navigation methods. Using stars and swells and birds, many canoe voyages were able to navigate over these long distances.

The work about and by Polynesian was hampered by racism.

During WW II airmen were trained in survival skills learned by Polynesian anthropologists.

The European explorers and anthropologists brought many incorrect ideas to bear on the investigation of Polynesia. Early on they believed that the land in the southern hemisphere had to balance the northern hemisphere, so in spite of all evidence to the contrary, they searched for Australis Incognito. For a period, they were convinced that the Polynesians were Aryans (Indo-European) as opposed to African or Asian.  Other theories suggested that the Polynesian drifted from island to island at the whims of the weather and currents.

The latest science concerning the origin of the Polynesians validates their oral histories. Comprehensive, fascinating, and readable.

Check out https://amazon.com/shop/influencer-20171115075 for book recommendations. 

Thursday, September 5, 2019

Eggs on Ice by Laura Childs ****

Eggs on Ice by Laura Childs (Crackleberry Club #8) opens with Suzanne Dietz and her friend Toni at the dress rehearsal for A Christmas Carol when the ghost stabs and murders Ebenezer Scrooge played by Allan Sharp. Allan is an accountant and a developer with many enemies. Suzanne gives chase after the ghost. The ghost threatens her. She vows to find out who is in the ghost costume. That is not the only murder.

Suzanne, Petra, and Toni own the Crackleberry Club CafĂ©. While solving the mystery, they also have plenty of time to post menus, serve breakfast and lunches, hold a Christmas tea, and cater Allan Sharp’s funeral visitation and a wine and cheese fundraiser for Hope Church. So, plenty of food and a little sleuthing.

Other characters include Junior (Toni’s deadbeat ex-husband), Mayor Mobley (corrupt), Sheriff Roy Doogie (eats a lot, quickly, and often), Reverend Ethan Jakes (fundamentalist and new to town), and Don Shinder (Allan Sharp’s partner). In addition to eating, we have a funeral, a nighttime cross-country ski church fundraiser, and a Christmas toy drive. Aside from the murders, Kindred is a wholesome city.

Maybe a spoiler, but more of a complaint. Mysteries generally require murderers to have motives beyond just random psychopathic killings. This book comes close to a random psychopathic killing.
“But why did you kill Hardwick?”
“To throw everyone off track.”

A delightful cozy murder with plenty of parties, food, and recipes.

Check out https://amazon.com/shop/influencer-20171115075 for book recommendations.