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It’s only the second day of 1924, but Mary Russell and her husband, Sherlock Holmes, find themselves embroiled in intrigue. It starts with a New Year’s visit from Holmes’s brother Mycroft, who comes bearing a strange package containing the papers of an English spy named Kimball O’Hara—the same Kimball known to the world through Kipling’s famed Kim. Inexplicably, O’Hara withdrew from the “Great Game” of espionage and now he has just as inexplicably disappeared.
When Russell discovers Holmes’s own secret friendship with the spy, she knows the die is cast: she will accompany her husband to India to search for the missing operative. But Russell soon learns that in this faraway and exotic land, it’s often impossible to tell friend from foe—and that some games aren’t played for fun but for the highest stakes of all…life and death.
384 pages, ebook
First published March 2, 2004
This is a land that gives one little of what is expected or desired, but an abundance of what proves later to have been needed. The process proves hugely disorientating, with the result that even the most stable of individuals rather go to pieces. (p. 73)Like some other books from this series, Ms. Russell goes undercover as a man. I wouldn't be able to pull off this gender-bendering – even with my hair cut and a change in clothing; nonetheless, I enjoy reading about characters who convince me that they can do this successfully (this is at least the third book that I've read this year with characters successfully passing). I enjoy it both for the unexpected twist, but also for the opportunities it allows the novelist – and us – to consider the meaning of gender (and in the case of this book, to a lesser extent race and religion): the male’s passion for games often led him to become frivolous towards those things requiring serious thought, and to be serious about the essentially frivolous (p. 151).