Near the topmost deck, in a small lift with glass walls and flickering buttons, I, Dorothy Gentleman, ship’s detective, opened a pair of eyes and licked a pair of lips and awoke in a body that wasn’t mine.
Murder by Memory follows Dorothy, a volunteer ship's detective on a millennium long voyage to another planet, as she tries to solve a murder that wasn't permanent and digs up a white collar crime that might be legal given the ship's rules, all while adjusting to the leap of her mind and memories from an older body with aches to a younger and healthier body in her twenties.
The novella is a cozy, low-stakes sci-fi mystery, with some interesting world-building where a person's minds/ memories can be stored and restored in their own or other bodies. This inadvertently made the mystery low-stakes, as the people develop a cavalier attitude towards deaths, unless, as it happens in the plot, the memory book is destroyed at the same time as the corresponding memories in a person disappear or die. The plot moves quickly, but the white collar crime held little interest for me, the murder only a bit more so.
The world-building and plot aside, the character sketches have potential - the description of a Miss Marple like older woman with a penchant for solving mysteries intrigued me. The potential wasn't completely satisfied here however - age and love for knitting aside, Dorothy didn't display much understanding of human nature and emotional intelligence, which are the real functional descriptors of Miss Marple's character. And the real issue is that Dorothy's character sketch doesn't reveal more than her interest in knitting and maybe nosiness for crime solving, and no growth. The ship's non-existent police force with ship's detectives who merely volunteer for the posts weren't easy to get past either.
Then the habits of my career—and my own considerable nosiness, let’s be frank—came to the fore.
On the whole, a low-stakes cozy sci-fi quick read, recommended for maybe light sci-fi generation ship fans but not Miss Marple fans.
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[1/4 star for the premise and the whole book; Zero stars for the world-building; 1/4 star for the characters and their growth; 1/4 star for the plot and themes; 1/4 star for the writing - 2 stars in total.]