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Berkley
ISBN: 0425210375
April 2006
Berkley Prime Crime
www.annwaldron.com
Reviewed By Wendall Sexton
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A RARE MURDER IN PRINCETON by Ann Waldron is the
third McLeod Dulaney mystery I have read, and after each read I
can soundly declare I have come across thoroughly enjoying what
I have just finished. Each book has offered a sound mystery
with believable characters and a fulfilling resolution. With
this fourth offering in the series, I do believe I have
discovered the best yet.
McLeod Dulaney is a treasure of a central
character.
The story begins with McLeod coming to
McLeod learns of this from Nathaniel Ledbetter, a
dinner guest of George’s her first day at the house. Natty
worked as director of Rare Books and Special Collections at the
university; and as McLeod holds a special interest in the
writings of Anthony Trollope, he extends an open invitation for
her to visit. She does so, and begins to meet all the players
in this little drama: Philip Sheridan, one of the collection’s
biggest benefactors and a true book lover beyond the content of
the written word – as McLeod quickly learns; Chester Holmes, his
assistant and curator of Sheridan’s collection; Molly, the
department’s receptionist; Miss Swallow, a reader/researcher who
made use of the collection’s archives; Randall “Buster” Keaton,
the curator of the Rare Books; and even the elderly Dante
Immordino, who appears at the new house one day offering the
same handyman skills he employed for Jill Murray when she was
the owner.
These are some of the people McLeod meets who
also become of the suspects in Nick Perry's investigation of the
ensuing murder.
The fact that a murder took place amongst this
group was slightly disappointing. With the immediate inclusion
of a murder from the start, I had hoped it would serve as the
mystery for McLeod's incessant curiosity. Something a little
different from the norm is always a spice of freshness to any
genre. Nevertheless, the new murder does have something in
common with the old, both centering on the ‘rare books and
special collections’ from which this mystery’s focal point
emerges. It is her discovery of several unique artifacts stored
away in an old box of dresses (one being an ancient book)
along with the collection of Philip Sheridan that stirs the
pieces of murder and mystery into play.
One factor I always appreciate with any Ann
Waldron mystery is it exceeds the trappings of mere mystery.
She successfully follows the formulaic pattern of what makes a
mystery through the intro of characters and
setting/murder/sleuth ask questions/murderer exposed/showdown
with sleuth/police arrive. Yet in addition to what mystery
lovers would expect, she also interjects a measure of knowledge
into the story. How many people who engage in a casual read,
such as A RARE MURDER IN PRINCETON, ever heard of the writings
of Anthony Trollope or Henry Van Dyke? When a book can
successfully engage people with knowledge they, perhaps, did not
know, while entertaining them with a solid mystery that will not
disappoint, the task of an author has been accomplished.
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