If Cuyler Overholt were the only author left alive to write historical fiction, she would convert me to the genre, and I would have only a sense of enthusiasm and love for it. This is another remarkable book about pre-World War I New York City. You learn fascinating history, and she immerses you in a plot that remains memorable and satisfying long after you've deleted the book from your reader/player. This book will capture you right at the prologue. In the prologue, you meet Teresa Castoria, a young immigrant from Italy. She has arrived at the famed Ellis Island entrance and is awaiting her beau. Long after all the other immigrants have left with their sponsors, Theresa is still there. Someone calls her name, she enters a carriage, and you won't see her again for several pages.
This is a grim snapshot of early turn-of-the-20th-century New York and the kind of human trafficking that occurred among immigrants. The author points out that inequality for women and trafficking/slavery are part of our landscape a century after this was written. Her message is clear enough and sobering by every measure.
While celebrating Independence Day, Genevieve Summerford learns that Theresa is missing. She sees authorities pull the body of a young Italian immigrant woman from the river on that day, and the scene haunts her and makes her think of the missing Teresa. The mystery deepens as she works at finding out what might have happened to the young woman. Overholt builds plenty of suspense into this, and Genna's life is on the line in a big way at one point.
In the messed-up world inside my head, Genevieve Summerford and Maisie Dobbs would be friends of mine, and I'd like to think they would befriend one another as well. Where solving mysteries is concerned, they are piers. Granted, their mysteries differ greatly from one another, and their ways of solving them differ, but I admire both women immensely to the degree that you can admire fictional women and retain your sanity. For all I know, the comparison of these two women happens more often than either author would like. It's true that neither stands in the other's shadow. If you read Maisie Dobbs, you will be equally captivated and impressed by Genevieve Summerford.