A Letter of Mary: A Novel of Suspense Featuring Mary Russell and Sherlock Holmes (A Mary Russell Mystery, 3)
A Letter of Mary: A Novel of Suspense Featuring Mary Russell and Sherlock Holmes (A Mary Russell Mystery, 3) book cover

A Letter of Mary: A Novel of Suspense Featuring Mary Russell and Sherlock Holmes (A Mary Russell Mystery, 3)

Paperback – October 30, 2007

Price
$15.99
Format
Paperback
Pages
304
Publisher
Picador
Publication Date
ISBN-13
978-0312427382
Dimensions
5.6 x 0.8 x 8.2 inches
Weight
9.9 ounces

Description

“An intellectual puzzler, full of bright red herrings and dazzling asides.” ― Chicago Tribune “A lively adventure in the very best of intellectual company.” ― The New York Times Book Review “Witty, literate . . . There's nothing elementary about King's take on period details or the behavior of her characters.” ― Orlando Sentinel “The game's afoot. And a lively, well-plotted game it is.” ― The Philadelphia Inquirer “Elegant . . . Laurie R. King continues to inhabit Sir Arthur Conan Doyle's Sherlock Holmes character like an inspired actor, faithful to the role yet adding so much of her own that he becomes far more than the sum of his quirks.” ― San Jose Mercury News “I report that Laurie R. King's A Letter of Mary delights me as much as its two predecessors. . . . I thoroughly enjoyed this book; I also admired it.” ― The Boston Sunday Globe “Superb . . . The great marvel of King's series is that she's managed to preserve the integrity of Holmes's character and yet somehow conjure up a woman astute, edgy, and compelling enough to be the partner of his mind as well as his heart.” ― The Washington Post Late in the summer of 1923, Mary Russell Holmes and her husband, the illustrious Sherlock Holmes, are ensconced in their home on the Sussex Downs, giving themselves over to their studies: Russell to her theology, and Holmes to his malodorous chemical experiments. Interrupting the idyllic scene, amateur archaeologist Miss Dorothy Ruskin visits with a startling puzzle. Working in the Holy Land, she has unearthed a tattered roll of papyrus with a message from Mary Magdalene. Miss Ruskin wants Russell to safeguard the letter. But when Miss Ruskin is killed in a traffic accident, Russell and Holmes find themselves on the trail of a fiendishly clever murderer. Clearly there was more to Miss Ruskin than met the eye. But why was she murdered? Was it her involvement in the volatile politics of the Holy Land? Was it her championing of women's rights? Or was it the scroll--a deeply troubling letter that could prove to be a Biblical bombshell? In either case, Russell and Holmes soon find that solving her murder may be murder itself. Laurie R. King is the Edgar Award–winning author of the Kate Martinelli novels and the acclaimed Mary Russell-Sherlock Holmes mysteries, as well as a few stand-alone novels. The Beekeeper’s Apprentice , the first in her Mary Russell series, was nominated for an Agatha Award and was named one of the Century’s Best 100 Mysteries by the Independent Mystery Booksellers Association. A Monstrous Regiment of Women won the Nero Wolfe Award. She has degrees in theology, and besides writing she has also managed a coffee store and raised children, vegetables, and the occasional building. She lives in northern California. Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved. A Letter of Mary A Novel of Suspense Featuring Mary Russell and Sherlock Holmes By Laurie R. King Picador USA Copyright ©2007 Laurie R. KingAll right reserved. ISBN: 9780312427382 Chapter One The envelope slapped down onto the desk ten inches from my much-abused eyes, instantly obscuring the black lines of Hebrew letters that had begun to quiver an hour before. With the shock of the sudden change, my vision stuttered, attempted a valiant rally, then slid into complete rebellion and would not focus at all. I leant back in my chair with an ill-stifled groan, peeled my wire-rimmed spectacles from my ears and dropped them onto the stack of notes, and sat for a long minute with the heels of both hands pressed into my eye sockets. The person who had so unceremoniously delivered this grubby interruption moved off across the room, where I heard him sort a series of envelopes chuk-chuk-chuk into the wastepaper basket, then stepped into the front hallway to drop a heavy envelope onto the table there (Mrs Hudson's monthly letter from her son in Australia, I noted, two days early) before coming back to take up a position beside my desk, one shoulder dug into the bookshelf, eyes gazing, no doubt, out the window at the Downs rolling down to the Channel. I replaced the heels of my hands with the backs of my fingers, cool against the hectic flesh, and addressed my husband. "Do you know, Holmes, I had a great-uncle in Chicago whose promising medical career was cut short when he began to go blind over his books. It must be extremely frustrating to have one's future betrayed by a tiny web of optical muscles. Though he did go on to make a fortune selling eggs and trousers to the gold miners," I added. "Whom is it from?" "Shall I read it to you, Russell, so as to save your optic muscles for the metheg and your beloved furtive patach? " His solicitous words were spoilt by the sardonic, almost querulous edge to his voice. "Alas, I have become a mere secretary to my wife's ambitions. Kindly do not snort, Russell. It is an unbecoming sound. Let me see." I felt his arm come across my desk, and I heard the letter whisper as it was plucked up. "The envelope is from the Hotel Imperial in Paris, a name which contains distinct overtones of sagging mattresses and ominous nocturnal rustling noises in the wardrobe. It is addressed simply to Mary Russell, no title whatsoever. The hand is worthy of some attention. A woman's writing, surely, though almost masculine in the way the fingers grasp the pen. The writer is obviously highly educated, a 'professional woman,' to use the somewhat misleading modern phrase; I venture to say that this particular lady does not depend on her womanliness for a livelihood. Her t 's reveal her to be an impatient person, and there is passion in the sweeps of her uprights, yet her s 's and a 's speak of precision and the lower edge of each line is as exact as it is authoritative. She also either has great faith in the French and English postal systems or else is so self-assured as to consider the insurance of placing her name or room number on the envelope unnecessary. I lean toward the latter theory." As this analysis progressed, I recovered my glasses, the better to study my companion where he stood in the bright window, bent over the envelope like a jeweller with some rare uncut stone, and I was hit by one of those odd moments of analytical apartness, when one looks with a stranger's eyes on something infinitely familiar. Physically, Sherlock Holmes had changed little since we had first met on these same Sussex Downs a bit more than eight years before. His hair was slightly thinner, certainly greyer, and his grey eyes had become even more deeply hooded, so that the resemblance to some far-seeing, sharp-beaked raptor was more marked than ever. No, his body had only exaggerated itself; the greatest changes were internal. The fierce passions that had driven him in his early years, years before I was even born, had subsided, and the agonies of frustration he had felt when without a challenge, frustration that had led him to needles filled with cocaine and morphia, were now in abeyance. Or so I had thought. I watched him as his long fingers caressed the much-travelled envelope and his eyes drew significance from every smudge, every characteristic of paper and ink and stamp, and it occurred to me suddenly that Sherlock Holmes was bored. The thought was not a happy one. No person, certainly no woman, likes to think that her marriage has lessened the happiness of her partner. I thrust the troublesome idea from me, reached up to rub a twinge from my right shoulder, and spoke with a shade more irritation than was called for. "My dear Holmes, this verges on deductio ad absurdum . Were you to open the envelope and identify the writer, it just might simplify matters." "All in good time, Russell. I further note a partial set of grimy fingerprints along the back of the envelope, with a matching thumbprint on the front. However, I believe we can discount them, as they have the familiar look of the hands of our very own postal-delivery boy, whose bicycle chain is in constant need of repair." "Holmes, my furtive patachs await me. The letter?" "Patience is a necessary attribute of the detective's makeup, Russell. And, I should have thought, the scholar's. However, as you say." He turned away, and the sharp zip of a knife through cheap paper was followed by a dull thud as the knife was reintroduced into the frayed wood of the mantelpiece. There was a thin rustle. His voice sounded amused as he began to read. "'Dear Miss Russell,' it begins, dated four days ago. Dear Miss Russell, I trust you will not be offended by my form of address. I am aware that you have married, but I cannot bring myself to assign a woman her husband's name unless I have been told that such is her desire. If you are offended, please forgive my unintentional faux pas. You will perhaps remember me, Dorothy Ruskin, from your visit to Palestine several years ago. I have remained in that land since then, assisting at three preliminary digs until such time as I can arrange funding for my own excavations. I have been called back home for an interview by my potential sponsors, as well as to see my mother, who seems to be on her deathbed. There is a matter of some interest which I wish to lay before you while I am in England, and I would appreciate it if you would allow me to come and disturb your peace for a few hours. It would have to be on the twenty-second or twenty-third, as I return to Palestine directly my business is completed. Please confirm the day and time by telegram at the address below. I believe the matter to be of some interest and potentially considerable importance to your chosen field of study, or I would not be bothering you and your husband. I remain, Most affectionately yours, Dorothy Ruskin "The address below is that of the Hotel Imperial," Holmes added. I took the letter from Holmes and quickly skimmed the singular hand that strode across the flimsy hotel paper. "A decent pen, though," I noted absently. "Shall we see her?" "We? My dear Russell, I am the husband of an emancipated woman who, although she may not yet vote in an election, is at least allowed to see her own friends without male chaperonage." "Don't be an ass, Holmes. She obviously wants to see both of us, or she would not have written that last sentence. We'll have her for tea, then. Wednesday or Thursday?" "Wednesday is Mrs Hudson's half day. Miss Ruskin might have a better tea if she came Thursday." "Thank you, Holmes," I said with asperity. I admit that cooking is not my strong point, but I object to having my nose rubbed in the fact. "I'll write to let her know either day is fine but that Thursday is slightly better. I wonder what she wants." "Funding for an all-woman archaeological dig, I shouldn't wonder. That would be popular with the British authorities and the Zionists, would it not? And think of the attraction it would have for the pilgrims and the tourists. It's a wonder the Americans haven't thought of it." "Holmes, enough! Begone! I have work to do." "Come for a walk." "Not just now. Perhaps this evening I could take an hour off." "By this evening, you will be bogged down to the axles in the prophet Isaiah's mud and too irritable to make a decent walking companion. You've been rubbing your bad shoulder for the last forty minutes although it is a warm afternoon, which means you need to get out and breathe some fresh air. Come." He held out one long hand to me. I looked down at the cramped lines marching across the page, capped my pen, and allowed him to pull me to my feet. Continues... Excerpted from A Letter of Mary by Laurie R. King Copyright ©2007 by Laurie R. King. Excerpted by permission. All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.Excerpts are provided by Dial-A-Book Inc. solely for the personal use of visitors to this web site. Read more

Features & Highlights

  • The third book in the Mary Russell–Sherlock Holmes series.It is 1923. Mary Russell Holmes and her husband, the retired Sherlock Holmes, are enjoying the summer together on their Sussex estate when they are visited by an old friend, Miss Dorothy Ruskin, an archaeologist just returned from Palestine. She leaves in their protection an ancient manuscript which seems to hint at the possibility that Mary Magdalene was an apostle―an artifact certain to stir up a storm of biblical proportions in the Christian establishment. When Ruskin is suddenly killed in a tragic accident, Russell and Holmes find themselves on the trail of a fiendishly clever murderer.
  • A Letter of Mary
  • by Laurie R. King is brimming with political intrigue, theological arcana, and brilliant Holmesian deductions.

Customer Reviews

Rating Breakdown

★★★★★
60%
(1.1K)
★★★★
25%
(440)
★★★
15%
(264)
★★
7%
(123)
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(-124)

Most Helpful Reviews

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... have read by Laurie King have been nearly as good as her very first in the Sherlock series

None of the books I have read by Laurie King have been nearly as good as her very first in the Sherlock series, "The Beekeeper's Apprentice." This particular book spends far too much time running the main characters up and down false leads and then the murder mystery is suddenly solved by a twist in circumstances the reader could not have foreseen. It's like have a magical mystery fairy fly in in the last few pages to tell the reader what he/she could never have discovered alone.
12 people found this helpful
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long winded, low on suspense/mystery/detection

I enjoyed the first book in this series, but the two follow ups were severely disappointing, to the point of me giving up the series. This book seemed exceedingly long winded with a much heavier focus on the relationship between Russell and Holmes at the expense of an actual mystery. I started to feel as though the series is now more of a romance and less of a mystery one. I understand that the series is supposed to be about Russel and not Holmes, but Russel just isn't very interesting. If anyone agrees but thinks the series recovers after this installment, please let me know.
6 people found this helpful
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Should not be in the mystery genre

I am always looking for another mystery writer so I can binge read their series of work. I enjoyed Beekeeper's Apprentice,but this book is just packed with many chapters of useless ( to the plot) inactivity with unpleasant characters. King seems to be writing books to expound on theology or feminism. I want a good mystery, not a villain who is revealed in the last chapter after a brief mention along the way. I'm giving up on this author
2 people found this helpful
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Another lovely novel in Laurie R. King's Mary Russell/Sherlock Holmes series.

I hesitated to buy this, the third in the Mary Russell/Sherlock Holmes series because I read a couple of reviews that said there was "too much religion" in this one. But I'm glad I did buy it because I found there was very little religion in it and indeed, it had nothing really to do with religion. Laurie R. King has a good handle on Holmes, and Mary is still a strong female character. Their marriage is, if anything, rather unconvential and slightly annoying, but both characters benefit from the pairing. I also enjoy the inclusion of other Holmesian characters, like Watson (not in this one), Mycroft, and Mrs. Hudson. And the big surprise in this one is a cameo appearance of one of my other favorite mystery characters who shall remain as nameless here as he is in A Letter of Mary.
2 people found this helpful
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A Letter Of Mary

A Letter of Mary is the fourth book in Laurie R. King's Mary Russell/Sherlock Holmes series. Russell and Holmes have settled down into domestic activities when their old friend, Dorothy Ruskin barges onto the scene. Readers last saw Dorothy at an archeological dig in Palestine in A Beekeeper's Apprentice. She has made a monumental discovery, a scrap of parchment written by Mary Magdalene that shows her to be an apostle.

Before The Da Vinci Code became a phenomenon, A Letter of Mary was already speculating about the truth of Mary Magdalene. As more and more accepted truths about history are being questioned and the more we realize that history is written by the victor, the more we question biblical truths as well. Mary Magdalene's role with the followers of Jesus, and whether there was a cover up of that role, is a subject that has taken writers by storm.

However, this novel is by no means as controversial as Dan Brown's. Dorothy Ruskin leaves the document in the care of Russell and takes her leave. The next day, Russell finds out that Dorothy has been the victim of a hit and run driver. And so Russell and Holmes embark on their latest case, to discover the identity of the driver and the motive behind the murder.

During the course of the investigation Russell and Holmes both go undercover to infiltrate separate suspects' households. This part of the book is fun. I enjoyed watching Russell play a different character and investigate on her own.

I liked A Letter of Mary. It has a good mystery and good suspects that keep you guessing "who done it". All in all, this is another strong entry in a very good series.

The next book in the series is The Moor.
2 people found this helpful
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love mary russelll

great to have a woman's perspective on the great Sherlock holmes.
us girls love him too ya know.
thank you
1 people found this helpful
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Hard to pick a favorite since I admire and thoroughly enjoyed reading ALL of ...

I purchased this copy as a gift - to get another reader hooked on Laurie R. King's works. Hard to pick a favorite since I admire and thoroughly enjoyed reading ALL of the Mary Russell series - but if pressed, A Letter of Mary might be my favorite. Readers who've not read any of the series should get a list of the books in order, begin at the beginning, and enjoy them all. The audio versions narrated by Jenny Sterlin are excellent as well - her voice and performances made me forget I was listening to an audio book and just feel I was listening to a person tell me a story. What a treat to have a series with ZERO ugly words or scenes. HIGHLY RECOMMENDED.
1 people found this helpful
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Interesting

While not phenomenal, this book was an interesting read. I enjoyed the interaction between Mary and Holmes, and especially between Mary and the obnoxious Col. Edwards. I certainly could have done with much less talk about what every character was wearing, those parts bored me senseless.

I'll be trying out others in this series, though I must say the Kate Martineli books are my favorites.
1 people found this helpful
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Great fun

Laurie King is a talented author who can bring to life a female Holmes and then pair her with Holmes himself. Russell is in every way the equal of Holmes and through her characterization I can picture the late, great Jeremy Brett, as Holmes, leaping from the pages.
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Marvelous!!

Terrific read.