A Review of The Ghost of Villa Winter (Canary Islands Mysteries Book 4), by Isobel Blackthorn
(Gumshoe—A Next Chapter Imprint, 2020), ASIN: B08R3KDZ9R
It should be said up front that this is the fourth book in a
series, and I have not read the prior three. Rest assured there is plenty of
context to the prior installment and, should you like this one, you’ll know
there is plenty more.
Place-based thrillers, especially a series that digs deep
into the history of a locale, fictional or not (the latter represented best by
Stephen King’s Castle Rock, Maine), invite the reader into a detailed world
full of mysterious characters and a cumulative lore that one-offs and stories
less tied to place often do not.
In this case, the acknowledgments indicate that the author
spent considerable time on the islands and used a real-life apartment where she
stayed as the model for the one in the novel (with permission of the owner).
Blackthorn also indicates that the history presented about the islands and the
villa are, to the best of her knowledge, true.
As a writer of historical fiction with thriller and paranormal
elements, I appreciate the amount of work that went into the world-building in
this book. Almost Dickensian in its detail, The
Ghost of Villa Winter invites the reader to step in deeply into this at-times
dire and deadly locale and explore the nooks and crannies with the heroine.
Further, given the popularity of Escape Rooms and the way
they have infiltrated storytelling on television and in film, and to some degree
in novels, the amount of detail Blackthorn employs in the layout of buildings,
landscapes, and living spaces allows the reader to participate vicariously in a
popular form of puzzle-solving.
The lead character, Clarissa Wilkinson, a former mortuary attendant,
is in the area to visit a man in prison whom she is convinced is (partly) innocent.
Working against her is her niece, who is partly responsible for putting him in
prison. What makes this setup interesting is that the man, whom Clarissa characterizes
as her Jean Genet, is guilty of
certain crimes—just not of murder.
Classic Agatha Christie in its bringing together of a group
of disparate individuals, many of whom seem suspicious (and perhaps for no
other reason than their foreignness to one another), The Ghost of Villa Winter makes use of this device to further
explore the geography, as the group tours around the island, seeking insights
into one another and commenting on the lore of the land, which involves that
sturdy old chestnut, the Nazis.
Among the group is a bestselling but currently struggling
mystery writer named Richard. With her keen observational skills and amateur
sleuth mindset, Clarissa soon becomes his companion—triggering snickers and nudge nudge, wink wink comments from the
others in the group. Especially considering he is already in an albeit toxic relationship.
I am always interested in writers writing about writers.
We’re quite a collection of social mannerism oddities and anxieties and tend to
be more in our heads, creating worlds and characters, rather than fully being
in this one with its at times far less interesting individuals.
The ghost referred to in the title, which appears only to
Clarissa, setting her on a quest the same way Hamlet’s father does, is a German
general and engineer who moved to the islands but could not escape ongoing
rumors of his being a Nazi agent.
Those with an interest in the persistent theory that Hitler
and many of his command staff survived and relocated to Argentina and elsewhere
(where they paid for plastic surgery to ensure their secret) will immediately
feel at home. U boats are central to this theory, and Blackthorn includes them
here.
It is when Clarissa and Richard become separated from the
group that the tension and stakes really ratchet up, and the novel becomes more
action-oriented, putting the pair in nearly constant danger for the next
several hundred pages.
Thankfully, they still have opportunities to collect and
assess evidence, further extending the Escape Room feel. And, because amateur sleuthing
has become increasingly prevalent online, especially through Reddit and
Facebook groups—brought to light in a recent documentary on the Cecile Hotel
and mysterious death of Elisa Lam—the reader can again “play along” as Clarissa
discovers and assesses the clues.
As the story progresses, the meta becomes the micro, as
Clarissa and Richard discuss the plusses and minuses of place-based thrillers,
the rise of amateur sleuthing and what it has done to the mystery genre, and
the technical aspects of crime-solving, such as “means, motive, and
opportunity.” For paranormal enthusiasts, there’s even a moment when Clarissa’s
assessment of why a piece of tech failed might have an alternate explanation…
As the clock ticks and murders mount, Clarissa and Richard
are forced to cross the line from theory to action, ramping up the tension and
pace of The Ghost of Villa Winter toward
its tragic—and satisfying—Act Three climax.
Not wanting to give away any more of the plentiful “Easter
eggs” for the mystery, paranormal, astrology, Escape Room, and true crime
enthusiasts in the audience (and these days, that covers most of the
reader-verse), I will leave it there.
It’s time to book a virtual room on the Canary Islands, near
to Villa Winter, and join in the sleuthing. You’ll be glad you did.
Learn more about the author and
her books at https://www.
nextchapter.pub/authors/isobel-blackthorn-mysterythriller-
author
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