I don't know if it's just me, but I have a certain devotion toward authors I started reading at a young age. Right about the time I started venturing out of the juvenile and young adult sections of the library I was about fourteen, and I will always be doomed to give the benefit of the doubt to these first "adult" authors that captivated me.
"Why do you choose the word 'doomed'?" you may ask. My answer to that question is Laurie R. King's new novel Pirate King. Before I enumerate all the reasons why you would be best served in leaving this novel on the shelf, I want to praise some of her previous novels. The first novel of Ms. King's that I read was The Beekeeper's Apprentice. The book centers on a young, extremely smart woman who lives in Sussex in the early 1900's. One day she just happens to trip over Sherlock Holmes (who, if you will remember, retires to Sussex post Conan Doyle's stories to be a beekeeper.) Due to her intelligence she makes a spetacular detective in training, and so begins the Mary Russell series, which has, since age fourteen, been one of my favorites.
(photo courtesy of laurierking.com)
The Beekeeper's Apprentice is easily the best book in the now eleven book series. While the books have waxed and waned in terms of readability over the years, the last two books (before Pirate King, that is) gave me great hope for the series as a whole. 2009's The Language of Bees and 2010's The God of the Hive were first rate page turners with depth not often found in the average mystery novel.
Pirate King, however, lacks both depth and suspense. The premise of the novel is a tough one. A famous film maker in the silent film industry is making a movie about people making a movie about Gilbert and Sullivan's opera The Pirates of Penzance. If this is not confusing enough remember that in The Pirates of Penzance there are twelve blonde daughters who end up getting kidnapped by (as luck would have it) twelve pirates who eventually marry them. There are, therefore, twelve actresses in the movie within the novel who are playing these twelve daughters. The reader has to keep track of all of these characters, none of whom are particularly interesting. Mary Russell is called in because there are some fishy things (perhaps drug trade?) going on with the film company. She stays because they end up getting kidnapped by real pirates. (Who saw that coming?!). A novel with this premise could be really fun. Or it could be confusing and tedious. Unfortunately Pirate King is the later.
The novel is not without at least one interesting character, however, and that is the translator, Fernando Pessoa, who is hired by the film crew. An amateur writer, Pessoa finds that by living out several different identities he can hone his craft. (In her acknowledgments King notes that Pessoa was actually a real person.) This makes for a very interesting and unpredicatable scene between him and Russell. After this, however, we don't encounter him again. Instead we are forced to hear Russell speculate over and over (even though her character claims to be annoyed with the whole affair) on possible romantic feelings between specific actresses and the pirates.
Halfway through the novel I was really hoping Holmes would show up so that I could be treated to some of his and Russell's intellectual banter. When he does show up, however, we only get pages of Russell repeating to Holmes all of the clues that have already been pointed out to the reader. This is just redundant.
In the end Pirate King feels like just what it describes: being on a film set. You wait around for something to happen and then when it does it is almost not worth the wait. Read Ms. King's wonderful first novel of the series The Beekeeper's Apprentice, but leave Pirate King on the shelf.