Welcome back to your favorite alternate history where the Germans are causing trouble, the French are snooty and the intersection of politics and business dealings end up getting people killed unnecessarily, forcing an elaborate cover-up. Oh wait, that seems like actual history.
Grimwood continues with his tale of a divergent history where the Ottoman Empire didn't collapse and end up being mostly well known as a comfortable footrest that really ties a room together, setting it in an Alexandria that got its named changed to El Iskandryia to protect the innocent and featuring people who would perhaps like a little less moral greyness in their lives.
In our last outing mysterious puzzling enigma Ashraf Bey, he of the weird fox in his head and undefined genetic enhancements, got pulled into our exotic locale by someone claiming to be his aunt in an effort to get him into an arranged marriage. After she got subsequently murdered, he had to solve the murder and get out of his arranged marriage to Zara, who was okay with that too except they both fell in love with each other after they decided not to get married and seem to be stuck with the decision. He's also taking care of his nine year old niece Hani, who seems to like him except when she doesn't, which sounds typical of nine year olds everywhere. Oh, and somehow he got to be Chief of Detectives after he helped the last one die, which sounds like a promotional ladder designed by Klingons.
Fortunately for his on-the-job training one of the first major cases comes along when a dead body is found in such a way that suspicion is cast on the richest man in town, who was also almost Bey's father-in-law. As if that wouldn't make dinner time awkward enough but it sounds like Hamzah's past might be emerging in a way that could haunt him in a psychologically devastating Ingmar Bergman fashion as opposed to the more conventional "boo!" style.
While the focus this time is once again on unsolved murders that appear to have no solution other than "everyone did it" or "no one did it", Grimwood does a pretty good job addressing what made the first novel so hard to decipher at times . . . namely the wider politics of this new history and how to navigate what the various foreign powers want with the city. Part of this is because Bey is on the inside and thus a little more prone to being exposed to the inner workings of everything (even moreso later in the novel) and while things still aren't totally clear on what the differences are between this world and ours, at least we have some broader context on what changes the divergence has wrought.
It's also a more straightforward plot, at least in the beginning. Having dispensed with the focus on getting Bey set up, Grimwood can run the characters through their paces and the push-pull between the international implications of tourists getting murdered possibly by a prominent citizen and the effect on the city itself is easier to digest. He still has a winning way with characters . . . Bey himself is a marvel in how the book can be structured around someone so unwilling to be effective and so opaque in his past that you still want to root for him. Part of this is accomplished by the supporting cast being skillfully deployed, so much of the fun is Bey interacting with Zara and his niece (a definite bright spot as he threads the needle of having a really smart child still act like a child and not be irritating) or with the other diplomats or Hamzah. Its a balancing act Bey has to pull off, acting like he knows what he's doing when he hasn't the slightest clue and pretending not to notice how easily he's doing it even while everyone else is.
It makes for entertaining reading even when the plot starts to get too murky for its own good. The constant flashbacks to child soldiers are explained easily enough but soon it starts to feel like the tourist murders and the deal with Zara's dad are two entirely separate issues with only the latter being fully addressed in the end (and one murderer is . . . dealt with? and maybe he wasn't the murderer?). Some of the plot choices feel more dictated by need rather than logic, with Bey getting a severe promotion partway through that takes the novel in a more interesting direction even as I'm not entirely sure how it worked within the context of the book itself (and why do people keep giving Bey important positions based on a reputation he didn't really earn?). The drama of the ultimate will-they or won't-they couple Bey and Zara isn't as prominent this time around but their reasons for not getting together seem based more on plot dictated stubbornness than anything resembling human emotion, unless there's a cultural context that isn't being explained very well.
And just because Bey is likeable, it doesn't mean he isn't problematic. After two books I'm still not sure what the point of the "fox" is inside his head or their fragmentary conversations, which don't seem to add much to the proceedings. He also has a wide variety of abilities that get mentioned but never seem to get used and a high degree of competence despite often having no idea what he's doing. Bey's often carried by events and doing his best to stay ahead of them but its not always clear what his motivations are ultimately, if he even has any . . . it makes him mysterious but not always as compelling as the book would like us to perceive him. On some level he's like Jaeger from Carla Speed McNeil's "Finder" series without the charisma or the effortless cool factor.
Even with those caveats I still think its a step forward from the first book, with the climax sporting a nice intersection of past and present, personal and political. It gives a wider feel for the city and its place in the world and the world's place in it, and Grimwood's writing makes the pace steady. It perhaps is a better introduction to the series than the actual first book is, so you wouldn't be totally off considering that as a prelude and this as the start of the real story, which seems like its only going to last one more book anyway.