So you want to play with magic?There’s trouble in the French Quarter when a professional basketball player hires Wyatt and voodoo mambo Mama Mulate to help him exorcise a supernatural demon. Wyatt is thrilled to have a paying client, Mama, over the moon in lust for the handsome athlete. Things look rosy for the pair of paranormal investigators until the assignment dictates Wyatt travel back in time to antebellum New Orleans. Thrust headfirst into the middle of a dangerous situation, Wyatt must deal with a red-haired Irish witch named Aisling and avoid becoming a haunted torture room victim in the courtyard of the forbidden Lalaurie mansion.
Garden of Forbidden Secrets, Book 7 of Eric Wilder’s intoxicating French Quarter Mystery Series. If you haven’t yet discovered the series, grab one of the standalone novels and visit the Big Easy tonight. You might decide to stay awhile.
I started out really enjoying this book ... and about midway through things took a turn. There will be some minor spoilers in this review, but nothing that reveals the entirety of the plot.
Basketball star Taj Davis has just been traded to New Orleans. His first day in town, he meets Adela Kowalski ... who has a tattoo that looks just like his. Only neither one of them remembers when they got the tattoo.
They hire investigators Wyatt Thomas and Mama Mulate, at the recommendation of a man Taj meets in St Louis Cemetery No. 1, to find out how they're connected. That man calls himself Sam ... and turns out to be the loa Baron Samedi.
Now, this is New Orleans ... so there's voodoo, hoodoo, and all kinds of mystery. There's also a subplot about the mafia and rum-running, but it seems to be positioned solely to make way for another book.
Here's where things started to go south for me. Adela starts having "spells" any time she gets near the site of the LaLaurie Mansion (corner of Royal and Governor Nichols). Through a variety of circumstances it is revealed that she was present the day of the infamous fire. At the same time, there is reference in period to "it's not quite Mardi Gras" ... when the fire happened April 10, just past Easter Sunday that year. Lent was over. I've researched the fire and Madame LaLaurie extensively for a book of my own, so that bothered me.
Another moment that jarred me was reference to Delphine LaLaurie's "comic book appearance." Perhaps "cartoonish" would have been a better term, since the first comic book wasn't published until 1934. However, Madame LaLaurie was regarded as a great beauty during her day, even as an older woman. While modern-day standards of beauty might not apply, people in the 1830s had different ideas of what constituted feminine pulchritude.
At the end of the day, it was an okay horror novel ... but those two things just bugged me way too much.
I had a hard time getting and staying into this book...
I had a really hard time fully getting into and staying into this book. I could easily put it down and get sidetracked on other things, and that's very unusual when I've got a book in my hand...especially most of Eric's. The whole Eddie story was a little confusing and over the top to me, I didn't see much benefit yet. However I'm hoping it leads either to a book of it's own or even a new series. All of the characters were likable except Aleda/Aisling her personality kept changing and just made her really unlikable. Anyway none of this was a real deal break because I'm off to read the next. Later friends ✌
I have read this entire series to date and am eagerly awaiting #8. Each is a great mystery with just the right amount of supernatural. I love all the characters, each has such a distinct personality, they are a treat! The secondary characters are equally enjoyable and I like when they make return appearances. I highly recommend this series.
I have read the entire French Quarter series and this is my favorite so far; tied only with the Big Easy. For me it has just the right mix of Voodoo, mystery and detective work.
I am absolutely in love with Wyatt, Mama, and all the others characters! I have re-read all of the French Quarter Mysteries; they are so good. I was excited this one came out and eagerly wait for number 8.
I really like Eric's style is mystery writing. I never can predict because he always twists the logical and obvious. Moving on the French Quarter Mysteries number 3.