Love This Series
This is the fifth book in this delightful British series about “a bunch of disaster-prone historians who investigate major historical events in contemporary time. Do NOT call it time travel!”
It was the usual mix of humor (example: the period costumes for one assignment include muffs for the ladies…you can imagine the jokes that ensue), thrills, fun, tea drinking, disaster, perils, tragedy, history, and friendship that make this series so much fun.
The Usual Cast of Characters
The usual suspects are back. These include the staff of St. Mary’s, an organization dedicated to “do not call it time travel”.
As usual our narrator is Dr. Madeleine Maxwell, red headed disaster magnet, Chief Operations Officer of St. Mary’s, a bundle of energy, attitude, and sarcasm; connoisseur of chocolate and alcoholic drinks, in love with Leon Farrell, St. Mary’s Chief Technical Officer.
History
This time the places and times visited include the disastrous Great Fire of 1666 in London that destroyed the old St. Paul’s Cathedral (later rebuilt); the Bonfire of the Vanities in 1497 Florence, fanatical Friar Savonarola’s burning of books, cosmetics, art, and other “occasions of sin”; and the Battle of Thermopylae, fought in 480 B.C. between the Persians and the Greeks lead by Sparta.
Open Day
There’s also an “Open Day” (carefully planned by Max), an exhibition of thrills for the public intended to make money for St. Mary’s, including a boat race, fortune telling, a side saddle demonstration, food, etc. What could go wrong?
The Usual Fun
This series is just so much fun. The characters are delightful. And I always learn about history from reading these books.
Audio Narrator
The narrator for all these books, British actress Zara Ramm, generally does a good job.
But she made a lot of weird (and inconsistent) errors, reading overlords as “overloads”, Da Vinci as Da Veechee, fevered as “fervored” and stop as “shop” for example. And the errors weren’t consistent either. She once read Girolamo as “Giolamo” and then read it correctly later. I don’t know if she was tired or rushed or what happened.