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5.0étoiles sur 5
A Wacky, Romantic Adventure Tale, Janv. 15 2004
I decided to characterize The Maltese Manuscript as an adventure tale because I've come to realize that Ms. Dobson's "mysteries" just cannot be characterized that way. She telegraphs who did what to whom much too clearly to see her books as mysteries. Sure, they are dead bodies, missing persons and stolen goods, but those are really just a backdrop for the comic action in this fine novel. Think of The Maltese Manuscript as a Stephanie Plum-like adventure involving libraries, academics, feminists and detective fiction authors. For long-time fans of the series, the romance of Professor Karen Pelletier and police Lieutenant Charlie Piotrowski is in full flower in this book. The complications from that romance remind me of many fine episodes of I Love Lucy. I hope that Ms. Dobson continues in this vein in future novels.The Maltese Manuscript is the fifth volume in Professor Joanne Dobson's series about Professor Karen Pelletier. In Quieter than Sleep, readers first met the professor. Doctor Pelletier found herself pregnant as a teen in high school, and dropped out of her plans to go to Smith to marry her truck driver lover. After a difficult pregnancy and marital abuse, she put her life together to raise her daughter as a single Mom while pursuing her academic career. Finally finding love with a cop in New York, she abandoned him to follow her desire for a career to settle at tony, elite Enfield College in New England. Arriving at Enfield, she became the new kid on the English department block sharing responsibilities for 19th century American literature with an aggressive, pompous womanizer who wanted to discuss more than literature with her. She found herself attracted to all the wrong men, and attracted attention from men she would rather avoid. Ah well, back to those term papers! In The Northbury Papers, the professor had an unusual stroke of luck that made her career prospects much brighter. In The Raven and the Nightingale, she made an important literary discovery and explored the nature of originality. In Cold and Pure and Very Dead, the author explores what makes literature significant and finally develops the love interest between the professor and her police lieutenant sparring partner. The primary appeal of the series is that Professor Dobson has created a memorable character who will resonate with all those who question pretension. Increasingly, the other characters are becoming memorable as well. Those who liked Quieter than Sleep, The Northbury Papers, The Raven and the Nightingale, or Cold and Pure and Very Dead may not like The Maltese Manuscript as much unless they like the series mostly for its characters and academic-spoofing humor. This book is a strong departure in style from the earlier books. If you think you would like a thinking person's Stephanie Plum, then The Maltese Manuscript is probably for you. I recommend reading Quieter than Sleep before this book because the characters and the context won't make as much sense without having read that book first. Otherwise, you may find this book to be a four-star read. This book is almost a spoof and delivers on the very promising sense of humor by the author that was hinted at in Cold and Pure and Very Dead. I was reminded of Hoodwink in the Nameless Detective series by Mr. Bill Pronzini. Enfield College is planning a Women's Studies conference, and noted crime novelist, Ms. Sunnye Hardcastle, has been hired to speak. That invitation makes the conference high profile, and shifts its focus onto feminism in detective fiction. Ms. Hardcastle reads the topic of Professor Pelletier's talk, and orders her driver to head for Enfield. Ms. Hardcastle wants Professor Pelletier to help her research her next book. Ms. Hardcastle's entrance is a memorable one: "The door to my office opened, and a dame walked in, bringing Trouble with her. The dame was Sunnye Hardcastle, celebrated crime novelist, and Trouble was her dog, a big Rottweiler with teeth like boning knives." The obvious reference to the classic noir detective fiction style is very cleverly and humorously done. The fun continues throughout the book. The language of academic studies about women provides constant sources of humor throughout the book. Because of their connection, Professor Pelletier is assigned to be Ms. Hardcastle's escort during her visit for the conference. During the conference, a dead body is found in the library, the manuscript of The Maltese Falcon disappears, a student and her ward disappear, and Ms. Hardcastle becomes a suspect. In the background, the library has been losing its detective fiction to an unknown thief for some time. When Charlie Piotrowski takes on the investigation, the potential for humorous mishaps explodes. Charlie tells Karen to keep out of the investigation. Miffed, she responds by withholding evidence and driving him up the wall. Can their relationship survive these strains? As I finished the book, I found myself wondering how I can cleanse my own writing of jargon that is impenetrable and off-putting to the general reader. Specialists, beware of hiding your expertise with stilted language!
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