|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
4 Reviews
|
Average Customer Review
Share your thoughts with other customers
Create your own review
|
|
Most Helpful First | Newest First
|
|
4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Gold Digger Hits Gold,
By Linda Suzane (www.MidnightBlood.com) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Gold Digger (A Klondike Mystery) (Perfect Paperback)
Enjoy history? Like a mystery? Gold Digger is an absolutely delightful historical mystery. I thoroughly enjoyed spending time back in 1898, the Yukon Territory, in the rip roaring mining town of Dawson. A native born Californian, I was raised on stories of the 1849 Gold Rush and the founding of San Francisco, so reading about the last great Gold Rush had a lot of familiarity but the great Canada wilderness was an unique setting. Vicki Delany has made the town of Dawson and its inhabitants come alive with a vivid realism of a great historical, without making one feel like they are reading a travelogue or passages quoted from a dry history tome.
The story's heroine, Fiona MacGillivray, is a woman of great courage and strength of will in a time when most women were thought of as no more than chattel. She owns a saloon, the Savoy, named after the fashionable London hotel. She is a woman of class and breeding, in a place where even a saloon owner can be considered respectable, if she acts as such. She has a 12 year old son Agnus, a smart inquisitive lad who hero worships the local Mountie, Constable Sterling, and wants to become a Mountie himself. After surviving the arduous journey to get to the Klondike and the near starvation of the first winter, summer is extraordinary beautiful, with fields of glorious wild flowers, warm days, sapphire blue sky. Life is good in Dawson, the Savoy's business is booming, until Jack Ireland arrives. A newspaper reporter from San Francisco, he immediately makes enemies and within 3 days is found dead, throat cut, on the stage of the Savoy. Was it the rival newspaper man? Or Fiona's lead singer, Irene, whom Jack physically abused? Or Fiona's partner, jealously protective of Irene? Or the good woman that Jack called a prostitute in his first story sent back to San Francisco? Or Fiona herself, whom Jack threatened to destroy for standing up for Irene and defending herself? Or someone else? Not a particularly complex mystery, it is still satisfying all the way around. It works because of the well drawn characters and setting handled with a careful attention to detail. In my opinion, Gold Digger really strikes gold! I understand it is the start of a new series, and I look forward to once again visiting Dawson and its interesting and colorful inhabitants. [...]
3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
History meets Mystery,
This review is from: Gold Digger (A Klondike Mystery) (Perfect Paperback)
History meets Mystery in Gold Digger by Vicki Delany. When a murder is committed in one of the 1890's Klondike boom towns, who else but the famous Canadian Mounties would be there to solve the crime? Why, none other than the beautiful co-owner of the Savoy Dance Hall & Saloon, Mrs. Fiona MacGillivray.
Our heroine has a shady past, but with her determination, and a little vain beauty thrown in, she manages to thrive in the hastily thrown together town of Dawson by building and managing a saloon/dance hall. When a nefarious reporter hits town and makes enemies at every turn, it's hard to find which person didn't want to see him dead when his corpse turns up in Fiona's dance hall. With everyone a suspect, friends and family are all called to question. Everyone seems to be hiding something, but the Mounties and Fiona plan to get to the bottom of it. With gossip flying about the Savoy's grisly mystery, more people than ever crowd the saloon and dance hall, while in her own words, Fiona thinks: "Murder was good for business." The descriptive details of the Yukon Territory during the Gold Rush make you want to learn more about some of the hardships people endured to make a place in this world. Against nature, starvation and even the depravities of other people, only the strong survive and the toughest thrive. Colorful details about the characters add much charm to this first book in the Klondike Mystery series. Eagerly I look forward to more visits with this forward thinking independent woman, the Mounties, dance hall girls, river front workers, a young boy coming of age and peoples from all over the world as they try to build their new lives under harsh conditions. by Rhonda Esakov for Story Circle Book Reviews reviewing books by, for, and about women
2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Murder in the Klondike,
By Jim Duggins, Ph.D. "Author, The Power and Sla... (Rancho Mirage, CA USA) - See all my reviews
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: Gold Digger (A Klondike Mystery) (Perfect Paperback)
Vicki Delany's book, "Gold Digger," is a story of the final days of Canada's Klondike Gold Rush. The Savoy Dance Hall in Dawson, Yukon Territory is the epicenter of this fast moving western mystery. It is there we meet the polyglot population of Canadians, Americans, English, Irish, and Scots who've come to make a fortune in the gold fields. Not unlike contemporary lotteries, the line of a fortune in gold attracts the best and the worst of humanity, seemingly mediated by the desperately poor trying to scratch a living from the excitement of legendary fortunes to be had just beneath the surface of the earth or on the velvet padded gambling tables of main street saloons.
Vicki Delany has assembled an all star cast of dance hall girls, drunks, thieves, prostitutes, all monitored by the Northwest Mounted Police, the "Mounties." Primary characters in this story are Fiona MacGillivray, a single parent mom and Ray Walker, her co-owner of the Savoy Dance Hall. "Gold Diggers" opens with the discovery of the corpse of Jack Ireland, a San Francisco journalist with a long and shady past, who's been murdered on the stage of the Savoy. The story moves quickly, spiced up by author Delany's wit and well-developed characters who swiftly draw the readers' sympathies for a single parent mom, a bright, likable teenager, and a noble Mounty, handsome enough to flutter the heart of the most hardened dance hall girl. In addition to the plot that includes the combination of poverty and greed that has attacted people to the Yukon, each of the characters has a story that alternately causes the reader to invest in the good guys or despise the bad ones. Those conflicts, man vs. man, lie at the sources of the tensions in "Gold Digger". Yet another feature of this novel is author Delany's talent for witty and salty metaphor, e.g. [the words of the saloon owner about the Mounty] "and he worshipped the liquor-spotted, spat-upon, sawdust-coated, cheap wooden planks that I walked on." For these reasons, the elegant well-crafted plot, and the tensions between well-developed characters of conflicting motives, "Gold Diggers" is a fast, sure read, one you won't put down and that you will finish with that satisfying read charactistic of an entertaining, sometimes profound portrait of an earlier age.
5.0 out of 5 stars
Readers will quickly attach themselves to this strong and adventurous woman,
By Midwest Book Review (Oregon, WI USA) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Gold Digger (A Klondike Mystery) (Perfect Paperback)
Vicki Delany is a former systems analyst who chose an early retirement. She now resides in Prince Edward County, Ontario. She has published several psychological suspense novels, as well as the Constable Molly Smith series. She is living her dream.
Set in 1898, Gold Digger takes the reader to the Yukon territory; to the tiny town of Dawson, where buildings are thrown up in a day and anyone who has been in town more than a week is considered to be an established citizen. Fiona MacGillivray is a single woman with a twelve year old son who has made her living using her intelligence. Not only is she the most beautiful woman in Dawson, but she also runs the most popular dance hall, The Savoy. When a dead man is discovered on Fiona's stage, she joins forces with NWMP Constable Richard Sterling, when she's not fighting off her many suitors. In the meantime, her son Angus has decided he wants to be a Mounty when he grows up and has taken to following Sterling all over town and beyond: "'You can look, Angus,' Sterling said, acknowledging the boy's presence. 'But mind you don't touch anything.' Angus leaned closer to get a better look, trying to take it all in. His stomach was beginning to settle. 'Had to have gotten a good amount of blood on his clothes,' Sterling said. 'Agreed,' McKnight said. The doctor arrived in the company of Sergeant Lancaster. Breathing heavily from his exertions, Lancaster took a seat on the bench beside Ray. The doctor walked to the foot of the stage. 'Dead, I'd say.'" There are some authors who make the reader feel that they are up close and personal, with an exciting plot; memorable characters; and an exotic setting. Ms. Delany is a master at all three aspects of writing. The reader feels transported to another time; another place. Her knowledge of the Upper Yukon Territory during the Gold Rush bespeaks considerable research to fill in details most people would overlook. But it makes her story a compelling experience. Fiona MacGillivray has led a most interesting life, and readers will quickly attach themselves to this strong and adventurous woman. Shelley Glodowski Senior Reviewer |
|
Most Helpful First | Newest First
|
|
Gold Digger (A Klondike Mystery) by Vicki Delany (Perfect Paperback - May 8, 2009)
$18.95 $14.78
In Stock | ||