Mystery writer Mark de Castrique is a
veteran of the broadcast and film production business. In Washington DC, he
directed news and public affairs programs and received an Emmy Award for his
documentary film work.
He’s written a number of thrillers
and mysteries including the Blackman Agency Investigations series, the Buryin’
Barry series, and some stand-alone novels. In Secret Lives (Poisoned Pen
Press, 2022) he introduces Ethel Fiona Crestwater, a seventy-five-year-old
retired FBI agent who now rents rooms in her Arlington, Virginia, house to active
FBI and Secret Service agents and who runs circles around her boarders,
literally and figuratively.
Ethel has just rented a room to her only
relative Jesse, a double first cousin twice removed, while he attends a local
university. A running joke in the story is the way she always introduces him
with his full relationship to her, not just cousin but double first cousin
twice removed.
Jesse is up at 4:30 in the morning
FaceTiming with his girlfriend who is attending university in London, when he
hears gunshots outside his window. He sees one figure on the ground and two
running away. He dashes to the scene where Ethel joins him after calling the
police and an ambulance. They both recognize the victim as another of Ethel’s
boarders, who lives in Richmond but stays with Ethel when he has temporary duty
in the National Capitol Region.
Thus begins a complicated tale of
murder, theft, and deceit involving millions of dollars in counterfeit money
and cryptocurrency. Along the way the reader is treated to a thorough
explanation of how cryptocurrency works and why it is such a dubious commodity.
Law enforcement jurisdiction over the
murder gets a lot of play. It took place in Arlington County but the victim was
a Secret Service agent who had worked a joint operation with the FBI. All three
groups agree to work together but naturally pursue private Agency interests. I
had trouble keeping all of the factions separate. Ethel had long-running
associations with all three and she tailors what she tells each one carefully while
she runs her own investigation.
Anyone who has lived in the
Washington, DC, region will recognize the many local landmarks cited in the
book.
Ethel is a fine addition to the ranks
of Mrs. Pollifax, Sister Jane Arnold, Victoria Trumbull, and
the many other senior sleuths who remind mystery readers that age does not
limit detective skills.
The next book in the series, Dangerous
Women, is scheduled for publication in October 2023.
Highly recommended.
·
Publisher: Poisoned Pen Press
(October 11, 2022)
·
Language: English
·
Paperback: 288 pages
·
ISBN-10: 1728258308
·
ISBN-13: 978-1728258300
Aubrey Nye Hamilton ©2023
Aubrey Hamilton is a former librarian who works on
Federal It projects by day and reads mysteries at night.
3 comments:
I thought the second was even better than the first. And, that joke continues into the next book!
Aubrey, this is a great review and I am sold on at least the first book in the series. I checked out his other series and they sound good too. So glad I saw this review.
Because of Aubrey's review, I put this book on hold at the library.
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