This is a pleasant read with the very much added bonus of Eleanor Roosevelt as one of the main characters. Roosevelt, perhaps our greatest first lady, was a remarkable human being. In this novel, which takes place in 1951, we find her in the middle of the cold war, working for human rights in every possible manner, a widow and a former first lady. As the book opens, she and secretary, Kay Thompson, have discovered the body of a young woman in the bathroom of a train. The young woman was the daughter of a friend of Eleanor’s. The girl had been missing and the mother had asked Eleanor if she could help find her.
The secretary, Kay, is new to the job. She’s filling in for her aunt “Tommy” (Roosevelt’s real long time secretary). She’s young and beautiful and thinks maybe she’ll meet a husband while working for the former first lady. What she doesn’t expect, and what makes this novel a journey of identity, is that Mrs. R will change her outlook profoundly. Kay gets involved in the investigation of the girl’s death which appears to have Soviet ties. It’s the height of the Cold War and everything is fraught. When the jurisdiction changes from the local police to the FBI, an organization Eleanor is familiar with, she has a bit more leeway to investigate.
What Eleanor is even more familiar with, as Kay discovers, is human nature, and it’s her look at the characters involved that solve the crime. Meanwhile the author takes the reader on an authentic feeling tour of the early 1950’s. I remember my aunt saying she couldn’t watch Mad Men because the handsy, arrogant, sexist men were all too realistic and took her back to a place she didn’t want to be. As Kay struggles through some unwanted advances herself – advances she takes for granted though does not enjoy – my aunt’s observation came back to me.
Kay is deciding if she wants to be a pampered wife or a woman like Eleanor who owns her own home (very unusual for the time). Meanwhile, the book introduces real life characters like Jack and Bobby Kennedy and Jaqueline Bouvier, all very young and not yet attached to one another. Kat admires Jackie’s work as a photographer, and Jackie ends up helping her find a vital clue.
Sprinkled throughout – and bolstered by epigraphs at the beginning of each chapter – are Eleanor’s practical words of wisdom. Eleanor infuses the book through she is in fact the secondary character. It’s interesting to see the pairing of an older woman (Eleanor would have been in her mid 60’s at the time) with a young one figuring out her life. This is a solid read and a decent mystery with a solution that’s somewhat unexpected, though believable. The heartbreak of the dead woman is not ignored and the mechanics of an investigation involving the interference of a beloved former first lady are strong elements here. I liked meeting Kay and enjoyed seeing her begin her journey to full adulthood. This is a good start to a series.