Edith Skom returns, better than ever, with another clever tale of English professor and amateur sleuth Beth Austin. With her unique ability to twist a plot with humor, style, and flair, Skom is certain to meet her fans' great expectations. The Charles Dickens Murders is perfect for readers who enjoy the books of Amanda Cross and Elizabeth Peters.
On a sweltering summer night, a woman is murdered in her hospital bed in New York City. Almost a thousand miles away, Midwestern University professor Beth Austin is leading a class through the complete works of Charles Dickens. The framework that connects this tale of two cities begins to unfold when Beth learns something she never could have imagined: forty years ago, her mother was involved in a treacherous love triangle at the University of Chicago.
Disturbed by her mother's past of painful lies, secrets, and murder, Beth is determined to find out the truth-no matter the cost. As she delves into the story of the man her mother loved and her rival for his affections, Beth discovers that these old deadly secrets may well destroy her own dreams for the future.
Edith Skom is the acclaimed author of The Mark Twain Murders and The George Eliot Murders and has been nominated for the Agatha, the Macavity, and the Anthony awards. She lives outside Chicago, where she is a lecturer at Northwestern University.
The Charles Dickens Murders opens with the murder of a woman in her hospital bed in New York City. We later learn that Dewey, the murdered woman, is one of the "Fourth Floor Gang" of girls who attended the University of Chicago at the same time as our heroine's (English professor and amateur sleuth, Beth Austin) mother Laurie. During her years at college, there was another violent death--never solved, as well as thefts, lies, secrets, and love triangles. When Beth talks her mother into spilling what she remembers about that previous death, she finds that she'd rather concentrate on that mysterious death than The Mystery of Edwin Drood which is the focus of her current class lectures. Her investigations culminate in a classic gathering of the suspects where she unravels the past to show the gang who was responsible for both the death 40 years ago and Dewey's more recent death.
When I picked it up at at Half Price Books, I was sure the The Charles Dickens Murders (1998) by Edith Skom would be a winner. After all, it's an academic mystery and I love those. Usually. This one--not so much. There isn't a likable character among the Fourth Floor Gang...including Beth's mother who shows a remarkable lack of interest in the death of one her supposed closest friends from college. The mystery plot itself is fairly well done (which gives us the source of all the star-power in my ★★ rating) but the motive is rather lacking. Perhaps if I had cared more about the characters, the motive may have seemed more compelling. Overall, one of the more lack-luster academic mysteries I have read (including The George Eliot Murders by the same author). I was also unimpressed by the supposed connection between the Dickens novels Beth is reading for her class (she moves on to Bleak House mid-way through the book). She tries to cast the various people from her mother's college days as Dickens characters, but the conceit really doesn't work well--and there is no other reason to title the book as it is.
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Some pretty steep conceptual leaps in how the protagonist figures things out, though I was kept guessing until almost the end. I wasn't super invested in the interpersonal dramas of the present day, and most of the characters from the flashbacks weren't particularly likable or dislikable.
I couldn't really buy into the oblivious professor boldly solving the murders, either. She seemed too fanciful - classic literature is not always a good lens with which to view human nature, after all. There is some cool potential in that concept - maybe it's better executed in the other books in the series? But in this one it felt a bit forced.
I will say that I just about devoured the book trying to figure out who the murderer was.
Dickens' references are mostly to Lady Deadwood of Bleak House, although there are some to Edwin Drood. The chapters alternative between events taking place at a 20th century state university and the University of Chicago in the late 1940s, presenting an interesting sociological comparison between student life at a major university and a modern regional school.
I confess, I was first attracted to this novel because of the title. I had not read an Edith Skom book before but am interested in Dickens as well as mysteries. I am very glad I picked it up and can see now I will have to go back and purchase the other two novels by Skom.
The narrative skips about in time some as we spend the first half of the novel living the story of the past (where/when the murder takes place) and then spend the second half with the protagonist as she attempts to solve the mystery. The skipping around in time was not difficult to follow and was actually a refreshing approach to telling the tale.
The characters were realistic and the plot was not at all predictable. At one point, one of the characters compares their situation with the plot of Agatha Christie's classic "Ten Little Indians" (also called "And Then There Were None"). Coincidentally, I had read that book, as well, only last month and thought the comparisons valid.
This book was a gift to me because I love Dickens, and the plot sounded interesting on the cover. But I just couldn't get past the shallow characters or their constant nonsense about boys and sex, etc etc to even get close to anything that sounded like a murder mystery was involved, let alone Dickens, and it never seemed like it would be worth it even when (if???) they showed up. The characters were mostly college girls, and so stereotypical: the popular one, the sensible one, the smart one who the popular one bribes a popular boy to ask out, etc etc etc. Just didn't do anything for me, so I pass.
Not the best of the series. Beth's mother reminisces about a murder that happened when she attended college 50 years ago. She tells the whole laborious story to Beth, Beth equates some of the characters to Charles Dickens story "bleak house"; Beth decides to find all the people that were involved in this murder story; imagines conversations that took place and brings the entire cast of characters together to reenact the last night they were all together when the murder took place. The entire story comes out and the appropriate people are punished.
The only reason that I finished it was that I was on a plane and had nothing else to read. I read the first hundres pages which were really slow. Lots of background with nothing happening. By that time, I decided to finish it to find out what happened, but the ending was confusing with the motive for murder very vague and a character who had never been mentioned before brought in.
I read the first two over ten years ago and this one felt like a standalone book. I remember that I liked the series way back when, but now I can see how cardboard the characters are and how poor the writing is. Best part and what kept me reading was the “who done it?”
This book is a must-read for all University of Chicago students and alum! It is a fun foray into the detective/mystery genre and a lovely reminiscent journey on campus in the 50s. Loved it!
A good mystery but it took its sweet time in getting to the point. I did like the overlapping of Dickens to a modern mystery though and it was very clever.