The Bear
Collector mysteries by John J. Lamb were published between 2006 and 2009. Only
five titles in the series but they earned a devoted following who still miss
them. One of the perils of publishing is the compulsion to identify a niche and
when a book doesn’t fit the niche assigned it especially well, readers who
would love the book are more likely not to find it, losing the book essential
reviews, praise, critical acclaim, and ultimately sales. This is what happened
to this series, I think, which deserved more attention than it got. The teddy
bear angle attracted cozy readers who didn’t bargain for the policework in the
books, and police procedural readers didn’t consider them because of the teddy
bears.
These books
sound fluffy and cozy and they are, to the extent they are centered around an
ex-cop and his second career as a high-end teddy bear artisan. However, they
are also rock-solid police procedurals. Lamb writes authoritatively and with
experience about the process of investigating homicides and his knowledge
informs nearly every page. He is also invested in the world of artisan stuffed
animals, which is big business with the potential for franchise sales to toy
manufacturers and Saturday morning cartoon shows. In this aspect these books
remind me a good deal of the Emma Lathen books which featured John Putnam
Thatcher, a banker who was forever getting involved in murders committed for
money. In each Lathen book the reader received an education in a specific
industry while following the banker/amateur detective.
In The
False-Hearted Teddy (Berkley, 2007), the second in the series, the economic
side of the business is clearly displayed. Brad Lyon and his wife Ashleigh
travel to Baltimore for a national teddy bear convention and public show. This
show is important because of the industry judging and awards and the attendant
sales and publicity. Receiving one of the awards can mean a significant boost
to an artisan’s career. One of the exhibitors dies suddenly after being accused
of stealing her bears’ designs, which a big-time toymaker had offered to buy
and mass produce. Brad unofficially starts looking into the evidence, invoking
the ire of the investigating officer, and is promptly arrested for the murder.
The beginning
chapters of the book are mostly centered on the bears but once the murder is
committed, the police procedural side takes over for the rest of the story. The
comments on the traffic and area landmarks are entertaining to residents. There
is an indirect reference to Mystery Loves Company, a mystery bookstore that
resided in Fells Point for a long time and has since moved to Oxford, Maryland.
These books
are still in print, which should tell the publisher how much of a mistake it
was to drop them, and are therefore readily available. Recommended for readers
of middle-of-the-road mysteries looking for a new pandemic series.
·
Mass Market Paperback: 262 pages
·
ISBN-13: 978-0425216101
·
ISBN-10: 0425216101
· Publisher: Berkley; First Edition (June 5, 2007)
Aubrey Hamilton ©2020
Aubrey Hamilton is a former librarian who works
on Federal It projects by day and reads mysteries at night.
2 comments:
I loved this series, and wish it had continued, although the last one in the series was the weakest.
I have no memory of ever seeing anything about them. Of course, that probably says a lot more about me than anything else. It sounded like an interesting idea.
I checked and my local library does not have any of the series. With money being very tight and Interlibrary being unavailable as it has been for months, I am out of luck, at least for now.
Not that I do not have a ton of books here to read. And, as my kid has taken to pointing out, if I am reading, I am not writing my own stuff.
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