Hardback Cover |
In the spirit of the season, up for
consideration today is A Stillness in Bethlehem by Orania Papazoglou writing as
Jane Haddam (Bantam, 1992). This is the seventh book in the Gregor Demarkian
contemporary mystery series. Demarkian is a retired FBI agent, one who
established and led the agency’s profiling department. In his retirement he began
consulting with police departments on a volunteer basis but has no official
standing or credentials. He has however a significant reputation as an
investigator; the references to him in the more sensational news outlets as “the
Armenian Hercule Poirot” cause him much angst.
After a high-profile case Demarkian comes home
to Cavanaugh Street in Philadelphia to find his friend Father Tibor Kasparian dangerously
exhausted from his work on behalf of Armenian refugees. Their mutual friend
Bennis Hannaford arranges for the three of them to travel to Bethlehem,
Vermont, to see the town’s long-running Nativity play and to give Tibor a
much-needed break. The tiny rural town has found a way to generate revenue and
to lift itself out of genteel poverty, similar to the college students in Rest You Merry by Charlotte MacLeod,
who created a profitable Yule celebration. The Christmas pageant is a tourist
destination and produces most of the income in Bethlehem, so when Tisha Verek, a
recent transplant to the area, decides to file a civil liberties lawsuit
against the town to stop the play, nearly everyone is upset. Who was upset
enough to shoot her in front of her house, however, is not clear, and the State
police wrote the death off as a hunting accident. The fact that a second town
resident was killed in much the same manner about the same time and not far
away did not rouse the State police’s curiosity, who labelled it another
hunting accident.
The town police chief was not so confident and,
when he discovers Gregor Demarkian in his village, he begs Demarkian to review
the evidence. When a third victim is claimed during the first night of the
pageant under Demarkian’s nose, he feels he has no choice but to find and stop
the culprit.
In a lifetime of reading mysteries, the
Demarkian series is among my greatest favorites. The plots are often downright devious
(see Blood
in the Water, for instance), and the people on the pages are powerfully
developed and finely nuanced. Father Tibor Kasparian is quite possibly the
fictional character I would most like to meet; his apartment stacked high with
books of all kinds on every surface inspires equal parts hilarity and envy every
time I read about it. The structure of the stories is intriguing: Characters
are sketched in a prologue to set the stage for the murders, there’s always
more than one, and then their back story unfolds as the book progresses. My
only quibble with the series is Demarkian’s astonishing obtuseness in his dealings
with Bennis Hannaford, a successful writer of fantasy sagas whom he meets on
his first case. Nonetheless, these books are simply not to be missed by any
mystery reader, and this title is a fine place to start reading them.
·
Hardcover: 289 pages
·
Publisher: Bantam
(November 1, 1992)
·
Language: English
·
ISBN-10: 0553090240
·
ISBN-13: 978-0553090246
Aubrey
Hamilton ©2018
Aubrey
Hamilton is a former librarian who works on Federal It projects by day and
reads mysteries at night.
1 comment:
One of my favorite series, but I seem to have missed this one! Thank you for bringing it to my attention, Aubrey.
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