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The Conjurer (Martha Beale Mysteries)

The Conjurer (Martha Beale Mysteries)
By Cordelia Frances Biddle

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Product Description

Intrigue, passion, and murder surround the suspicious disappearance of famed Philadelphia financier Lemuel Beale in the winter of 1842. As his daughter and only child, Martha searches for her father. She begins to develop a romantic attachment to Thomas Kelman, an assistant to the mayor who's been assigned to the case. Kelman has also been investigating the ritual slayings of several young women; a likely suspect appears to be the renowned conjurer and clairvoyant Eusapio Paladino. Could there be a connection between the two cases?


Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #818915 in Books
  • Published on: 2008-06-10
  • Released on: 2008-06-10
  • Original language: English
  • Number of items: 1
  • Binding: Paperback
  • 320 pages

Editorial Reviews

From Publishers Weekly
Set in Philadelphia in 1842, Biddle's second mystery to feature upper-class amateur sleuth Martha Beale (after 2007's The Conjurer) offers fully human characters and a credible plot. When a wealthy young woman goes missing, Martha and Thomas Kelman, the mayor's assistant in charge of solving crimes, investigate. As their hunt takes them into the homes of the rich, a brothel frequented by the well-to-do and the streets of the poor, Martha and Thomas must face their own feelings for each other and resolve their class differences. Meanwhile, Martha's adopted daughter, Ella, embarks on a search for her real mother, and Martha's young adopted son, Cai, worries about ghosts who come down the chimney. Exceptional attention to period detail helps transport the reader to a past very unlike our own and yet so similar. (Aug.)
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

From Booklist
In 1842 Philadelphia, Martha Beale's life changes dramatically after her father, wealthy financier Lemuel Beale, disappears while hunting. Her father's confidential secretary, Owen Simms, quietly takes over the decision making in her life, and Martha is not sure how to break free of his seemingly solicitous control. Martha believes her father might be alive, and Thomas Kelman, assistant to the mayor of Philadelphia, investigates his disappearance, along with the ritual murders of several young prostitutes. A conjurer, Eusapio Paladino, complicates matters with his visions of the murders and his affair with a wealthy society woman. Told from multiple points of view, the many story lines converge as Martha and Thomas solve her father's disappearance and find a pair of murderers. An excellent sense of time and place permeate the action, but the complex plot and multiple points of view, some unnecessary to the main story line, distract from Martha and Thomas' investigation. Leisurely pacing; numerous, well-integrated details of place and time; and appealing central characters make for a satisfying historical mystery. Sue O'Brien
Copyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved

Review

"May attract readers who loved Caleb Carr's attention to detail in The Alienist and Jacqueline Winspear's appealing sleuth, Maisie Dobbs."
---Library Journal

"Masterful storytelling...transports readers to 1842--complete with sights, sounds, and a narrative that rings true to the period."
---Rhys Bowen, author of In Dublin's Fair City

"An intricately orchestrated narrative....Biddle wonderfully evokes the color and culture of the time."
---Publishers Weekly
 
"Fresh and believable. Biddle knows her manners and her city, and shows both to great advantage."
---Cleveland Plain Dealer


Customer Reviews

Not the mystery series I'd anticipated1
I'm afraid I wasn't as impressed as the other reviewers were with "The Conjurer." Initially, I had thought the novel an introduction to a new sleuth, Martha Beale. It is after all titled: The Conjurer, A Martha Beale Mystery, implying that Martha plays an active role in the resolution. As it turns out, Martha spends most of the time worriedly wringing her hands, or fainting, or shaking in her boots when her father's secretary bullies her, or worrying what society will think of her, or drugged up, or reacting to the events around her. By the time she develops a spine, the novel is at an end. I don't know what the product synopsis meant by her "investigation" with the mayor's assistant, Thomas Kelman; there is no investigating done by her at all. The mysteries in this story resolve themselves simply by means of fate, not from any intervention by Martha or Tom.

I also think the story is overburdened by too many characters, some of whom have very little or none to do with the plot. I get the feeling the novel was overpopulated for the purposes of creating complexity where none existed and to illustrate the wide breadth of classes in 1840s Philadelphia. Let's see, there's a spineless heroine, her future love interest, an odious secretary, a missing financier, another financier with bad manners, the financier's wife who rightfully should be the star because she has more gumption than Martha, an arrogant socialite, the socialite's disturbed husband, a mysterious man with a club foot, a 10-year-old prostitute, a sibling in an asylum, a beggar who lost her son, a boy who suffers from epileptic seizures, a domineering matron, a serial killer, an Italian necromancer, the necromancer's assistant to translate his master's ravings, a brothel madam, another society couple, and I'm sure there are a few more I've missed. Whew! If one is to mimic a Dickensian love for characters, at least make them memorable and central to the plot.

As a diehard mystery fan of the grim and dastardly kind (the mysteries, not me), I never thought I would ever say this, but there are TOO MANY deaths here. There are women who are poisoned, children killed ritualistically, a man (Martha's father) believed to have drowned but no body can be found, another man found dead in the streets, each with its own sub-plot that, by hook or by crook, probability issues notwithstanding, are forced to all be related.

A messy plot with a rushed and unbelievable ending. A tighter, better organized story with a dynamic heroine would have been infinitely superior. Sometimes too much does not mean multi-layered and complex. Sometimes it just means...well...too much.

more a historical tale than a mystery 4
In 1842 Philadelphia, wealthy financier Lemuel Beale vanishes without a trace. His only offspring overly protected and obedient to a fault Martha finds her father's secretary Owen Simms ordering her about. Already having her fill of her demanding father, Martha begins to revolt by insisting the city investigate the disappearance of Lemuel.

Mayoral assistant Thomas Kelman is assigned to learn what happened to the influential Beale though the city government assumes he is dead. Although he is tied up with another inquiry into a serial killer murdering female child prostitutes, he makes time to search for the missing banker with the help of Martha though Simms tries every trick including drugs to keep the suddenly non-compliant heiress under his thumb as he plans to marry her and her money. As Thomas and Martha work on both of his cases, a societal conjurer favorite Eusapio Paladino makes all sorts of proclamations on the prostitution homicides that lead to him to being the prime suspect. However, complicating the Kelman inquiries, Paladino is arrested for allegedly killing John Durand, the husband of the magician's upper crust paramour Emily Durand.

In some ways this is more a historical tale than a mystery as much of the story line provides depth to 1842 Philadelphia's upper and lower classes; thus fans of American whodunits will find the mid nineteenth century tidbits at times too much as that takes away from the investigations. Still fans, especially those who appreciate a deep period piece, will enjoy Martha Beale's dangerous coming out gala.

Harriet Klausner

Needs a Magician to Stitch It Together Better2
To the writer's credit, she does a lovely job of capturing what life was like in 1840's Philadelphia. It's also intriguing that she writes all of the action in the present tense in order to give readers the feeling that they are experiencing everything in real time. Unfortunately, I felt that her heroine, Martha Beale, was not only a passive observer of much of the action but that the plethora of characters who were introduced are strung together with so many instances of contrivance that the resolution of the mystery felt implausible. I'd like to have seen a much tighter focus on Martha Beale if she's indeed to be the feminist sleuth of a new mystery series; this is something that should have been caught by an editor.

Christina Hamlett
Author of "Movie Girl"