Set in post war America, 1946, We meet Maple Bishop, who has been widowed. Her late husband, Bill, who was a physician, didn’t need to fight in the War, but went through a sense of duty, and she has realised that she is hard up. At the age of 31, she needs to pay the bills, find money for the mortgage or be thrown out of her home, and it galls her that despite been trained in Law, with a degree, she cannot find a job because she is a woman.
Life seems hopeless. An idea takes shape, her hobby is making dollhouses, intricate in details, materials, and accurate depictions of the occupants, perhaps she can make money by taking commissions from the local people. The local store owner, Ben Crenshaw, will let her sell the houses in his store, hopefully it will bring in more customers for them both.
One night, Maple is delivering an order to an isolated farm property, when she gets there, she notices that the barn door is open, investigates and finds the body of a man hanging from the hay hoist. The Sheriff thinks suicide, Maple believes it is murder, but the deceased was unpopular and there is a marked reluctance to open up an investigation into the death. Maple decides to make a dollhouse of the crime scene, so she can test her theories of murder before she presents her findings to the Police, but her endeavours uncover a web of lies, deception and corruption, that puts her own life and liberty at danger.
An absolutely fascinating read, loosely based upon the real life person of Frances Glessner Lee, who also used her skills of making replicas of murder scenes to teach and train officers at the National Police College in America, her models were so highly detailed and logical, as seen on line, the more you study them, the more questions are posed.
My thanks to Netgalley and the publishers, Crooked Lane Books for my advanced digital copy, freely given in exchange for my honest review.
A five star rating. I will leave reviews to Goodreads and Amazon UK upon publication.