Rhys Bowen brings New York City and its people, famous and not, alive like no other author. She weaves well-known historical and entertainment figures into the Molly Murphy stories like a fine silk lining in a well-tailored jacket. In The Last Illusion, this reader was treated to a personality and profession I have long found fascinating, Houdini and the enigmatical art of the illusionist. I knew I was in for an exciting ride when the unconventional worlds of Molly Murphy and Houdini collided. Anything was possible, and the author gave me page after page of possibilities fulfilled.
A much anticipated trip in the hot summer days of New York City with Daniel to Miner's Bowery Theater to see the great Houdini, recently returned from a successful three-year European tour, results in a journey into the elusive world of illusion for Molly Murphy, private detective and fiance of Captain Daniel Sullivan of the New York Police Department. Before Houdini and his assistant, wife Bess, can take the stage, a horrible mishap occurs when another illusionist performs a sawing-in-half trick on his assistant, Lily, and Lily is actually sawed into almost in two. The audience is sent home, but, as a member of the police force, Daniel takes charge of the grisly scene, while Molly stands by and watches. Of course, Molly never stands by for long, and she soon finds herself comforting Bess Houdini, who is overcome with shock at the sight of the injured and dying Lily. Daniel and his men start an investigation, and Molly goes home without expectation of any further involvement. However, a note sent from Bess Houdini to Molly's Patchin Place residence the next morning starts the wheels turning for a new and remarkable case for Molly, as Bess wants to hire Molly to uncover who is trying to harm Houdini, something that Bess is sure to be a real threat. With Daniel making demands that Molly give up her detective career when they get married, which he hope is sooner rather than later, Molly vaguely promises that this case will be her last. If indeed it is her last, it is certainly one of her most intriguing and important ones. Murder, espionage, counterfeiting, magic, the Secret Service, and Molly once again taking the stage. "Never a dull moment" is redefined in this thrill of a tale.
One of the aspects of the Molly Murphy series that I am finding especially satisfying is the historical descriptions of a growing and changing New York City, the contrasts of old and new. In one particular description, Molly is riding in an automobile with Daniel, and she recites the images and sounds experienced. "While we had been talking we had passed fashionable shopping districts and Macy's spanking new department store that took up a whole block along Broadway. then at last Midtown gave way to the crowded streets of the Lower East Sid and we made slow progress, inching between delivery drays, trolleys, and pushcarts. Ragged children darted across the street with no apparent concern for their safety and the air rang with the cries of vendors, the clang of constructions from a new building, the shrill squeals of children, and the clip-clop of horses' hooves. A veritable cacophony, but one that I had come to love. It was the sound of a city full of life."