Summary:
An intriguing, 200-year-old mystery propels this
multilayered stand-alone from British author McDermid set in
England's Lake District. Scholar Jane Gresham pursues her
theory that HMS
Bounty mutineer Fletcher Christian returned secretly
from exile to his homeland in the late 18th century. A
shriveled body found in a bog seems to bear resemblance to
this dashing hero, right down to the South Sea tattoos that
blacken his buttocks. Jane searches relentlessly for a lost
manuscript by the poet Wordsworth that relates Christian's
tale in tantalizing excerpts between chapters. Various
subplots complicate her quest, including a fraught friendship
with precocious 13-year-old Tenille, a lonely, mixed-race
girl who also loves Romantic poetry. With a feminist,
socially conscious spin, McDermid (_The Distant Echo_)
vividly contrasts marginal subsistence in London's dismal
Marshpool neighborhood with the Lake District's bucolic
lifestyle. Boasting blurbs from such notable authors as
Harlan Coben, Tess Gerritsen and Joseph Finder, this could be
McDermid's break-out book.
100,000 printing; author tour. (Feb.)
Adult/High School—During an English summer of
record-breaking rains, a peat bog in the Lake District opens
to reveal a 200-year-old body bearing South Pacific island
tattoos. The area, home to Romantic poets, is where Jane
Gresham, Wordsworth scholar, grew up, and she finds her
interest piqued by the news. She has long believed that
Fletcher Christian, HMS
Bounty mutineer, didn't die on Pitcairn Island but
returned to England. She has theorized that Christian
recounted his adventures to his old schoolmate Wordsworth,
who wrote them down, and those documents and a related poem,
now worth millions, lay forgotten in a local home. In the
race to retrieve the valuable manuscripts, Jane finds herself
competing against sinister forces that would stop at nothing,
including murder, to reach them first. The suspenseful story
and its subplots, which include Jane's friendship with
13-year-old poetry-loving Tenille, who lives in Jane's London
public housing project, create an absorbing thriller.
McDermid establishes a strong sense of place in the
atmospheric and pastoral Lake District that contrasts sharply
with the sprawling housing project. Historical and literary
references to Wordsworth's life and work and to the South
Pacific adventures of the
Bounty mutineers all help to make this novel come
alive. Teens will enjoy the lively characters, brisk pace,
and careful unraveling of the centuries-old mystery with its
satisfactory conclusion.—_Susanne Bardelson, Kitsap
Regional Library, WA_
From Publishers Weekly
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Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division
of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.