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The Cemetery Yew (Victoria Trumbull, 3)
 
 
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The Cemetery Yew (Victoria Trumbull, 3) [Hardcover]

Cynthia Riggs (Author)
4.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (4 customer reviews)


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Book Description

Victoria Trumbull, 3 September 1, 2003
There's more than one reason the new West Tisbury police chief officially made 92-year old Victoria Trumbull her deputy. For one thing, Victoria knows just about everything about everyone in town, and a lot about the rest of the Martha's Vineyard year-round population as well. Not to mention their ancestors. Victoria may be afflicted with the usual aches and pains that descend on nonagenarians (she has a cutoff shoe to accommodate her bunion, and a stout stick to help her on her walks across the fields and in the woods). But she is as sharp and as sharpeyed as the proverbial tack. So it's not odd that when Victoria is the only one who notices something amiss among the gravestones of the West Tisbury cemetery, the chief listens.

Something is indeed amiss. Responding to a request by presumed relatives in the Midwest to disinter a coffin for reburying elsewhere, things go wrong from the start. The driver of the hearse coming to collect the coffin disappears during the Island ferry trip in a rainstorm. Other deaths - some of them irrefutably murder, the others suspicious - follow. And when as a last measure the coffin is found, dug up and opened, it does not contain the expected body. Insult upon injury, the coffin itself disappears.

Meanwhile, the available for rent bedroom in Victoria's house has been taken over by a woman relative of one of their neighbors and her raucous toucan, a bird as spoiled as the most bratty millionaire's heir. Victoria is graceful about her unwanted boarders; but they do interfere with the column she writes for the local newspaper and with her efforts to discover whether the strange antics of the coffin are related to the murders.

Victoria is the most realistic and the most delightful nonagenarian in mystery fiction. Her years have not blunted her intelligence and her sharp wit. We're lucky that she's still around and seems to be set for a long time.


Editorial Reviews

From Publishers Weekly

Victoria Trumbull, the astute, 92-year-old Vineyard native and deputy police officer, takes on her most bizarre case yet, in Riggs's third appealing Vineyard mystery (after 2002's The Cranefly Orchid Murders). An empty grave, a misplaced coffin and a missing hearse driver are the harbingers of a series of grotesque murders, whose victims turn out to share an odd South American connection involving smuggling and an exotic bird. The author lends ballast to an outlandish plot by lovingly depicting ordinary island people (awkward teens, a friendly police chief, small-town officials with their rivalries and gossips) and events (notably the return of the local high school football team from the big game against Nantucket). The unfamiliar portrait of the Vineyard in winter is another plus. With patience and charm, the down-to-earth Victoria succeeds in drawing out confidences. In the end, even she is surprised.
Copyright 2003 Reed Business Information, Inc.

From Booklist

Can a 92-year-old protagonist engage readers of all ages? Definitely, as proven in this third adventure featuring nonagenarian Victoria Trumbull. As the snow begins to fly in the quaint village of West Tisbury on Martha's Vineyard, Victoria welcomes a visitor to her cozy home. Dahlia Atherton, on the island to visit her cousin Howland, moves in with Victoria when Howland's house proves too dusty and drafty. Dahlia's arrival coincides with the exhumation of a coffin supposedly containing the remains of a suicide victim. After the coffin is found to contain only sandbags, many people connected to it either disappear or are murdered. When Victoria's houseguest appears to have something to hide, the spunky sleuth puts her detective powers to work to uncover the whole story. Once again, Riggs introduces entertaining supporting characters, including town selectmen Denny Rhodes and Lucretia "Noodles" Woods. Her native's knowledge of Martha's Vineyard shines in the expert evocation of the picturesque community. As satisfying as a steaming bowl of chowder on a cold New England evening. Jenny McLarin
Copyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved

Product Details

  • Hardcover: 208 pages
  • Publisher: Minotaur Books; 1st edition (September 1, 2003)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0312321260
  • ISBN-13: 978-0312321260
  • Product Dimensions: 8.6 x 5.8 x 0.9 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 12.8 ounces
  • Average Customer Review: 4.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (4 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #1,791,988 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Customer Reviews

4 Reviews
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Average Customer Review
4.0 out of 5 stars (4 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Diamonds Can Be Costly, April 5, 2006
In this third book in the Victoria Trumbull series, we see the 92-year-old sleuth trying to solve several murders on Martha's Vineyard. Moving around a little slower than she would like, Victoria tries to connect a series of events that confuse law enforcement on the island. An empty casket that had been buried for 10 years, a fire at the dump, a missing hearse driver, and a boarder with a barking bird keep Victoria hopping. Will she ever be able to find the $10 million in missing jewels that are reportedly on the island?

This book started off a bit confusing for me, but liking the other books in the series, I did finish it. About half way through, things started to fall into place, and I was kept guessing as to who the murderer might be. The ending was surprising, and paved the way for some of the characters from "off-island" to return.

This series is much different from another cozy series by Philip Craig also set on Martha's Vineyard. Both are good reads, and wonderful additions to the cozy genre.

The first book in this series is titled "Deadly Nightshade". Enjoy!
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Great Location and Lead Character - with a Caveat, May 26, 2006
I love Martha's Vineyard, with its quiet lanes and lovely gingerbread cottages. I was thrilled to find a mystery series set on this lovely location. I was even more happy that the lead character - Victoria - was a 92 year old island resident. It offered a lot of texture, background and wisdom to come out of the main character.

The story is a nicely complex one. There's an empty coffin which, it turns out, has millions of dollars of jewels hidden in it. There are numerous people who are after the jewels and perhaps killing each other off as well. You have the typical small island politics, with people fighting with each other, attracted to each other, and generally leading mixed-up lives. You also get the quiet, non-tourist-season glimpses into the island in its "natural state".

I love how you really get a sense of what an island is like off season. The residents all know each other. They know the back routes into the dump when the front one is closed. They plow through the snow, they walk down the quiet lanes. They're lonely and friendly and patient and tense.

There are subtle clues slipped into conversation that you might miss or might pick up on. There are literary references that, if you catch them, give you a leg up as well.

I do have a complaint about Victoria. I really like characters with flaws and with a well rounded aspect to them. So I appreciate that Victoria shouldn't be perfect. However, she appears to have completely NO common sense at times. It starts with her planning on sending cash in to a "you've won $10 million dollars" sort of sweepstakes offering. It always drives me insane that people in our modern day and age fall for the Nigerian Money Scam, so to have a lead character in essence doing this in the story bugged me. This happens right in the beginning of the book so it was very off-setting.

Victoria goes on to do several other things like this, including inviting a supposed murderer to her house and just chatting with him, with nobody else around, completely unprotected - and bringing up key topics with him. You could say "Oh, but she comes from a gentler time when everyone was friendly." Surely she didn't get to age 92 without learning to take care of herself. It's like this aspect of her comes and goes to fit the plot. Sometimes she is quite wise and sharp. At other times - when the plot calls for it - her brain turns to mush and she is completely blind to the dangers. It was very frustrating to me.

Still, I did enjoy the book and I told myself that "her brain had temporarily become feeble because of her age" to get myself past those moments. It did reduce my enjoyment of the book, because the whole reason I was enjoying the 92 yr old character was that she WAS portrayed as able to live on her own and be a productive member of the community. To have to reduce her to "having flashes of great stupidity" because of her age upset me. If at least *reasons* for her lapses could be put into future books, I think I would enjoy them much more.
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A missing coffin and murder on Martha's Vineyard, April 25, 2006
This wonderful book is set on Martha's Vineyard. Victoria Trumbull is a 92-year-old police deputy. The police chief is new to the island and knows that Victoria knows everyone and can be invaluable in an investigation.

When a casket isn't where it's supposed to be in the cemetery, Victoria is the one to notice something wrong to help them locate it.

Her friend Howland's cousin Dahlia is coming to the island. She has cancer and will be getting treatments at the local hospital. Victoria agrees to let Dahlia and her bird Bacchus rent a room until Howland can get his home presentable for Dahlia.

Soon the hearse driver disappears, there is a string of suspicious deaths, as well as the coffin goes missing after it's dug up.

Victoria begins to put the pieces together, but can she do so before the rest of the players are dead?

I really enjoyed this book. Victoria is such a wonderful character. She may be old, but her mind is very sound. I like that this book was told from her persepective.

Martha's Vineyard is a favorite setting of mine. I always feel like I'm on vacation when I read a book set there.

I highly recommend this book and series.

[...]
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Inside This Book (learn more)
First Sentence:
Victoria Trumbull could feel the surf pounding on the south shore, a forerunner of heavy weather. Read the first page
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
missing coffin, coffin piece, cemetery superintendent, stump pile, hearse driver, dump fire
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
Herb Plante, Town Hall, Vineyard Haven, West Tisbury, Cousin Dahlia, Doc Jeffers, Rose Haven, West Virginia, Dahlia Atherton, Foreign Service, Old County Road, Victoria Trumbull, Denny Rhodes, Howland Atherton, Chief O'Neill, Daggett Avenue, Island Enquirer, Tiasquam Repairs, Brandy Brow, Main Street, Oak Bluffs, Tremont Ashecroft, Vineyard Sound, Mary Jane Smith, Red Crossley
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