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A Darker God: A Laetitia Talbot Mystery (Mortalis)
 
 

A Darker God: A Laetitia Talbot Mystery (Mortalis) [Kindle Edition]

Barbara Cleverly
4.2 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (6 customer reviews)

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Sold by: Random House Digital, Inc.
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Editorial Reviews

From Publishers Weekly

Set in 1928, Cleverly's third Laetitia Talbot mystery (after 2008's Bright Hair About the Bone) offers a cleverer puzzle than its predecessors, but fails to measure up to her Joe Sandilands historical series (Folly du Jour, etc.). In Athens, the stabbed body of Sir Andrew Merriman turns up during a rehearsal of an English production of Aeschylus' Agamemnon. Merriman, a classics scholar, was about to finish writing a biography of Alexander the Great that would answer two burning questions about the conqueror—the identity of his murderer and the location of his tomb. Fortuitously, Det. Chief Insp. Percy Montacute of Scotland Yard, who recently has been [s]econded to Athens as a CID officer, is a member of the play's cast. Aided by archeologist Talbot, Montacute investigates. Talbot, who had an affair with Merriman, is a less memorable lead than such other female sleuths of the same period as Maisie Dobbs and Phryne Fisher. (Apr.)
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

From Booklist

Post–World War I politics and ancient mysteries mix well together in this third in Cleverly’s series starring Laetitia “Letty” Talbot (following Bright Hair About the Bone, 2008). It’s 1928, and British archaeologist and amateur sleuth Letty has recently returned to Athens from a dig in Crete when her friend, mentor, and former lover Andrew Merriman is murdered, his stabbed body found during a rehearsal of Agamennon, which he translated from Aeschylus. The next day his sharp-tongued wife, Maud, who knew of her husband’s dalliances, also dies, presumably pushed from her home’s second-floor window, casting suspicion on actress Thetis Templeton, Maud’s visiting cousin and Andrew’s current lover. DCI Percy Montacute from Scotland Yard, an amateur actor newly posted to Athens, is present when Andrew’s body is discovered and heads the investigation, aided by Letty. In addition to bringing deductive reasoning to the case, Letty becomes an endangered player in a long-planned plot for revenge by a victim of the 1923 Greece and Turkey population exchange. A complex, well-plotted historical mystery enlivened by its feisty and more-than-modern protagonist. --Michele Leber

Product Details

  • Format: Kindle Edition
  • File Size: 614 KB
  • Publisher: Bantam; Original edition (March 23, 2010)
  • Sold by: Random House Digital, Inc.
  • Language: English
  • ASIN: B00338QEOM
  • Text-to-Speech: Enabled
  • Average Customer Review: 4.2 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (6 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #129,853 Paid in Kindle Store (See Top 100 Paid in Kindle Store)
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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars "The scream followed the unmistakable sound of a blade thrusting into flesh.", March 29, 2010
A Darker God: A Laetitia Talbot Mystery (Mortalis) is my introduction to Barbara Cleverly fiction, and I enjoyed getting to know Laetitia Talbot who reminds me of Deanna Raybourn's Julia Grey and Tasha Alexander's Emily Ashton, although Talbot's adventures take place in a later era.

It is 1928, and Letty, a forward-thinking Britisher, has just returned to Athens, Greece from an archeological dig. Her mentor, Professor Sir Andrew Merriman -- former soldier, " 'digger, classicist, and writer' " -- thinks someone is following him. It turns out to be Percy Montacute, a Scotland Yard chief inspector seconded to Greece. The two men served together in the military, and they catch up on the news. Merriman explains he is planning to stage a version of Aeschylus's play, Agamemnon.

A few months later, the dress rehearsal for the play is in full swing in an outdoor theater near the Acropolis. Letty is watching from front row center with Maud Merriman, Andrew's wife. "As the sun set, the evening sky began to flush with grey-purple light....It should have been a moment of deep peace but, somewhere just out of sight, a man was screaming in his death throes." As it turns out, the play and reality coalesce, and by the end of that evening a real body has been discovered. The Greek police and Chief Inspector Montacute are on the case. Letty is volunteered by Montacute to help him with his investigations, first as a recorder of witness information and then as someone whose familiarity with the Merriman house can ease the interviews there. But before twenty-four hours pass, someone else dies, and the victim, breathing her last, accuses a young woman who played the husband-killer Clytemnestra the evening before. Letty and her beau, rather agnostic Vicar Gunning, find themselves in a swirl of intrigue, both political and personal. Letty is certain the wrong person is being held for murder, but how to prove it?

Behind aspects of the intricate plot is a 1923 historical event called "The Population Exchange Between Greece and Turkey" which uprooted millions and caused deaths that could have been avoided. In A DARKER GOD, one man craves eye-for-an-eye revenge for the death of loved ones during that transfer, and he has targeted someone close to Letty. With a storytelling symmetry, the denouement takes everyone back to the amphitheater and AGAMEMNON, but the fates seem to have decreed that this production is doomed.

Cleverly seemingly effortlessly incorporates the echoes of Alexander of Macedon, Agamemnon, and the overseeing "dark god," Dionysus into her tale. She also finds place for the early twentieth century Eleutherios Venizelos, "world-renowned revolutionary, politician, and hero" and his "glamorous, mysterious" wife, Helena, as well as a few other historical figures such as the deposed George the Second, High King of the Hellenes.

Laetitia Talbot first appeared in The Tomb of Zeus (Laetitia Talbot Mysteries) and then in Bright Hair About the Bone (Laetitia Talbot Mysteries). This, her third outing, will likely not be her last as she has unfinished business in Salonika. And that's a good thing because it is a pleasure to follow such literary-laced, cleverly-plotted historical whodunits as A DARKER GOD.
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars "There Was No Way He Could Escape or Flee His Fate...", June 27, 2010
By 
R. M. Fisher "Raye" (New Zealand = Middle Earth!) - See all my reviews
(TOP 500 REVIEWER)   
Laetitia Talbot (or "Letty" as she's generally known) is back for her third mystery, once more discovering that a contemporary crime has eerie echoes of the past. Set in Athens in 1928, Letty watches the dress rehearsal of a performance of Aeschylus' "Agamemnon" in an open-air theatre, looking forward to the climactic scene in which King Agamemnon is murdered in his bathtub. She herself has prepared the dummy corpse for the event, and she's eager to see the effect. She's only mildly hampered by the presence of Maud Merriman, a dour, fussing, older woman that Letty nevertheless feels compelled to endure - mainly because Letty is the former lover of Maud's husband Andrew Merriman (as established back in The Tomb of Zeus).

But reality and drama merge when the bloodied figure in the bathtub is revealed to be that of Andrew; stabbed through the heart. Luckily, a police inspector is amongst the cast, and he ropes in Letty to help him organise the suspects, two of whom stick out in particular: the loud, arrogant Geoffrey Melton and the woman who played the part of the vengeful queen Clytemnestra: Thetis Templeton.

With Maud complaining of the house being watched, the fact that Andrew was on the verge of publishing a controversial book, rumors of illicit affairs and pregnancies, and the tense political environment, there are ample motivations and suspects for murder floating about. Teaming up with her love interest William Gunning, Letty makes it her business to do the right thing by her former-lover and discover the identity of his killer.

Although the Laetitia Talbot mysteries never *quite* match up to the excellence of Barbara Cleverly's other detective Joe Sandilands, the author once more plots a fascinating and intricate mystery that weaves together ancient history with the liveliness and discovery of the 1920s, all of which is laced with the themes and motifs of Greek mythology. Some basic knowledge of the time periods and famous characters that Cleverly involves may be helpful, as the likes of Alexander the Great, the legendary characters of Greek myth, various gods and goddesses, and even the more contemporary figures of Prime Minister Eleutherios Venizelos and his wife Helen, are all incorporated into the proceedings.

Also noteworthy is her use of "The Population Exchange Between Greece and Turkey" a treaty that was signed in 1923, and which caused the displacement of over two million people in the enforced immigration that followed, many of whom succumbed to poverty or illness after their expulsion from their homeland. I admit, I had never heard of the event until reading this novel, and in an essay written by Cleverly at the conclusion of the novel, she sheds more light on this rather horrific chapter of human history.

Cleverly has always been masterful at making her historical/mythological borrowings relevant to the plot, and that's certainly the case here, in which the consequences of the treaty are pivotal to at least one character's motivation. It's tied in neatly with the mystery of Alexander the Great's missing tomb and the mysterious gift that Andrew bequeaths to Letty, as well as the themes of vengeance and murder found in the opening story of Agamemnon.

Letty is a spunky enough female lead, though often overshadowed by her co-stars, and still not quite up to the standards of Joe - yet it's hard to dislike someone so witty and wise. The story itself has a few fits and starts in terms of pacing at the beginning of the story, but hang in there, as somewhere around chapter ten (they're quite short), things really start to heat up. Best of all, the story ends with the promise of new adventures to come, as Letty has a promise to fulfill in Salonika.
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Letitia Talbot mystery, April 28, 2010
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It was a very well done mystery and I enjoy the characters more and more with each new book
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More About the Author

Barbara Cleverly is a former teacher and a graduate of Durham University who now lives in Cambridge. Her debut, The Last Kashmiri Rose, was a New York Times Notable Book of 2002.

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