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Heat Wave

door Maureen Jennings

Reeksen: Paradise Café (1)

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Fictio Myster Historical Fictio HTML:

It's July 1936 and Toronto is under a record-breaking heat wave. Charlotte Frayne is the junior associate in a two-person private investigation firm, owned by T. Gilmore. Two events set the book's plot in motion: an anti-Semitic hate letter is delivered to Gilmore, who up to now has not acknowledged his religion, and Hilliard Taylor, a veteran of the First World War requests the firm's assistance in uncovering what he believes is systematic embezzlement of the Paradise Café, which he owns and operates with three other men, all of whom were prisoners of war. The two events, although seemingly completely unrelated, come together in this wonderful novel that brings to life characters who are as real to the reader as those of the Murdoch series.<… (meer)

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The novel is set in 1936 in Toronto during a heat wave. The first of the Paradise Mystery series, it introduces Charlotte Frayne, a junior private investigator working for Thaddeus Gilmore.

The book opens with Mr. Gilmore receiving a letter calling him a “filthy Commie Jew” and an implicit death threat. Shortly afterwards his wife Ida is attacked in their home and Mr. Gilmore becomes the main suspect. Charlotte sets out to prove his innocence. At the same time, she is hired by Hilliard Taylor, one of the owners of the Paradise Café, to investigate why money is going missing. She goes undercover as a waitress to determine who is responsible for the thefts.

Charlotte is the narrator. She is very much a modern woman placed in a historical setting. She is loyal, independent, determined, compassionate, and eager to prove herself in a man’s world. Sometimes she comes across as too-good-to-be-true, a heroine coming to everyone’s rescue, even an overheated horse. The café owners are so impressed by her ability to solve their case when, in fact, a direct conversation amongst the owners would have solved the mystery.

I found the plotting so obvious, with several problematic elements. To find her boss’s home address, Charlotte opens the safe, instead of going directly to the city directory? This is just a clumsy device for her to find an important document. For someone who is a private investigator and so should know better, Mr. Gilmore behaves in ways that do not help his situation. Why would the woman who discovers Ida not use the Gilmore’s telephone and instead go to a neighbour? Chapters 4 – 6 have Charlotte talking to all the neighbours of the Gilmores; it seems a tactic to confuse the reader when in fact the guilty party is immediately obvious when first introduced. The entire Paradise Café case is a flimsy device to involve Charlotte; it could have been solved after one conversation amongst the four owners of the café. Why would a safe combination be kept where anyone could see it? Surely most people can memorize a simple combination! Again, this is just a device to unnecessarily complicate the case. Detective Jack Murdoch seems so willing to enlist the help of a civilian? It the sight of a uniform bothers a witness, why not send a policewoman in plain clothes to question that person instead of a civilian? How does the attacker know Mr. Gilmore’s secret?

The plot is slow with little intrigue or suspense. Instead, unnecessary elements seem to be added to distract the reader. For instance, the relationship between Charlotte’s grandfather and his femme fatale neighbour seems totally unnecessary. And it is resolved so quickly and easily. The suggestion of a romance for Charlotte is just annoying – again unnecessary. Why does there always have to be an ineffectual policeman with a stupid theory?

I did appreciate the historical aspects. The book touches on anti-Semitism and the fear of Communism, as well as the difficulties experienced by people because of the Depression. Certainly, the author has researched Toronto and has used that research well to detail locations within the city.

This book will undoubtedly appeal to fans of the Murdoch Mysteries whether in book form or on television. I find them much too obvious, preferring mysteries that are more subtle and challenging. I’d recommend the book for someone looking for a light, easy read in the vein of the Lane Winslow series by Iona Whishaw.

Note: Please check out my reader's blog (https://schatjesshelves.blogspot.com/) and follow me on Twitter (https://twitter.com/DCYakabuski). ( )
  Schatje | Sep 28, 2023 |
Maureen Jennings is perhaps better known as the author of the Detective Murdoch mysteries on which the popular TV Series Murdoch Mysteries is based. She has written other mysteries as well. The K Handshape is one that I have read. Unlike this book and the Murdoch series it is set in a more modern time and with more modern forensic tools available. I quite enjoyed it but when I heard Jennings had started a new series I decided to get in on the ground floor, so to speak.

The 1930s Depression was a hard time for almost everyone in North America. The people of Toronto were no exception. When you throw in blistering hot temperatures and no rain the poor were the hardest hit. Charlotte Frayne is lucky to have a job as a junior associate in a private detective agency. She started as a secretary and general dogsbody to Mr. Gilmore but worked her way up to be a detective herself. Mr. Gilmore needs her detective skills when his wife is attacked and dies of her injuries as the police have decided that he must be the guilty party. Additionally Charlotte has been hired by Hilliard Taylor, one of the co-owners of the Paradise Cafe, to go undercover to investigate funds that have gone missing from the cafe's takings. So Charlotte has her hands full and the brutal weather doesn't help matters. She is also worried about her grandfather with whom she lives because he has taken up with a neighbourhood widow lady and Charlotte's instincts tell her the woman can't be trusted. Fortunately she isn't alone in pursuing the truth about Mrs. Gilmore's death. Detective jack Murdoch is also investigating and he supports Charlotte's ancilliary investigations.

Jack Murdoch and the four owners of the Paradise Cafe are veterans of World War I. The cafe owners were all in the same prisoner of war camp. In fact that is where they came up with the idea of operating a cafe because they used to spend their time recounting food experiences that they remembered. The Paradise Cafe caters to the poorer Toronto residents providing nourishing full meals for a reasonable cost. In the back room of the cafe the local Communist party meets to figure out how to improve the lot of the working class poor. At the same time there is rising anti-Semitism in the city with some people following the precepts of the Nazi Party in Germany. Mr. Gilmore even received a threatening note calling him a filthy Commie Jew even though very few people knew he was Jewish. It seems like not only the ambient temperature is seething.

I quite enjoyed this and I'm looking forward to reading the next in the series, November Rain, which was gifted to me together with this book by my sister and brother-in-law. ( )
  gypsysmom | Oct 22, 2021 |
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Fictio Myster Historical Fictio HTML:

It's July 1936 and Toronto is under a record-breaking heat wave. Charlotte Frayne is the junior associate in a two-person private investigation firm, owned by T. Gilmore. Two events set the book's plot in motion: an anti-Semitic hate letter is delivered to Gilmore, who up to now has not acknowledged his religion, and Hilliard Taylor, a veteran of the First World War requests the firm's assistance in uncovering what he believes is systematic embezzlement of the Paradise Café, which he owns and operates with three other men, all of whom were prisoners of war. The two events, although seemingly completely unrelated, come together in this wonderful novel that brings to life characters who are as real to the reader as those of the Murdoch series.

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