With sincere appreciation to Edelweiss, publisher Sourcebooks and Author, Cuylor Overholt for providing this e-galley for my enjoyment and review.
Published September 6, 2016
The Hook - In my life before the library I was an LPN, leaving me with a natural interest in books with medical themes. Early exploration of psychiatry, the field of women in medicine were certainly factors in choosing A Deadly Affection. The clincher in the end is that the author, Cuylor Overholt is a Connecticut Author. How could I resist?
The Line(s) - ”I’d tell her that I never wanted to let her go, that I wanted to be her mother more than anything in the world. I’d tell her that from the minute I felt her moving inside me, I knew she was a gift from God.”
The Sinker - A Deadly Affection is being promoted as many things. Originally self published, it is A Next Generation Indie Award Winner for Best Mystery. It is being marketed to that audience as well as to fans of Caleb Carr’s The Alienist. Early reviews called it atmospheric, a whodunit, a historical mystery, and a suspenseful romance. Author Susan Elia MacNeal describes the protagonist. Dr. Genevieve Summerford as “a heroine with brains, compassion and grit”. All of this is true, and the praise is deserved.
This debut defies the peg in a hole mystery genre classification. It easily crosses over into crime fiction, literary novel, medical drama, suspense, women’s fiction, historical fiction or what have you. Mix and match, call it what you will, just be certain to read A Deadly Affection.
Take a step back in time to the early 1900’s roads and alleys, the upper wealthy and lower seamier neighborhoods of New York City. Psychiatrist Dr. Genevieve (Genna) Summerford initiates a unique new program to help heal ”injuries of the mind”. Her determination to practice a different kind of psychiatry puts her at odds with many, particularly her father who feels she should be content to practice general medicine.
Genna plans to meet with a group of women suffering a loss, and through a weekly series of lectures and mental exercises she believes that each will be helped to suppress ”self-defeating thinking and develop a more hopeful outlook”, referred to as persuasion approach. At the first meeting held at St. Christopher House, she is met with wariness, suspicion and skepticism by the women. Genna explains:
”You see, we’ve recently discovered that brain cell activity can be altered by painful life events. When a person has suffered a shocking loss, as each of you has, alterations in the brain can produce physical symptoms—things like dyspepsia or headache or rash. Just the sorts of things”, I added Pointedly, “that have been plaguing all of you”>
By meeting’s end, Genna wonders if she has lost them already. Yet one woman, Eliza, remains behind. Eliza, single, shares the sadness and despair she feels at the loss of her daughter almost eighteen years ago, who was taken immediately after delivery for placement with “better parents”. She named her Joy and didn’t even get to say good-bye. Eliza would like to know where and with whom Joy was placed. Due to their discussion, Eliza decides she must confront the doctor the very next day and ask where her daughter is. The next day comes and the doctor is found brutally murdered, Eliza being the last to see him and the main subject with cause.
This all happens in the first few pages setting the mystery promised. Who killed the doctor? Genna becomes not only a physician but also a detective as she tries to prove her patient’s innocence.
Many aspects of this story appealed to me. Dr. Summerford is a strong female character making her way in a predominately male field, where she is testing new ideas in therapy. Genna’s character comes to life vividly in both her thought process and general demeanor due to the author's skill. She is complex, with secrets and flaws of her own, yet determined not to let these hinder her goals. Though I got a good picture of who she is, I certainly won’t mind another book to continue our relationship. In addition there are burgeoning theories on mental illness, the brain, and other diseases that I won’t mention as they may be spoilers. Not since Time and Time Again by Jack Finney have I enjoyed walking the streets of the big city as much as in this book. Cuyler Overholt has a love for New York’s history that is obvious in her detailed description.
Highly recommended.