I was sent a free copy of Cleopatra’s Dagger by Carole Lawrence. All opinions are my own.
About Cleopatra’s Dagger:
A journalist in nineteenth-century New York matches wits with a serial killer in a gripping thriller by the prizewinning author of the Ian Hamilton Mysteries.
New York, 1880. Elizabeth van den Broek is the only female reporter at the Herald, the city’s most popular newspaper. Then she and her bohemian friend Carlotta Ackerman find a woman’s body wrapped like a mummy in a freshly dug hole in Central Park―the intended site of an obelisk called Cleopatra’s Needle. The macabre discovery takes Elizabeth away from the society pages to follow an investigation into New York City’s darkest shadows.
When more bodies turn up, each tied to Egyptian lore, Elizabeth is onto a headline-making scoop more sinister than she could have imagined. Her reporting has readers spellbound, and each new clue implicates New York’s richest and most powerful citizens. And a serial killer is watching every headline.
Now a madman with an indecipherable motive is coming after Elizabeth and everyone she loves. She wants a good story? She may have to die to get it.
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You can purchase Cleopatra’s Dagger at Amazon.com
About the Author:
Carole Lawrence is an award-winning novelist, poet, composer, and playwright. In addition to Edinburgh Twilight, Edinburgh Dusk, and Edinburgh Midnight in the Ian Hamilton Mysteries series, she has authored novellas, short stories, and poems―many of them translated internationally. She is a two-time Pushcart Prize nominee for poetry and has won the Euphoria Poetry Prize, the Eve of St. Agnes Poetry Award, the Maxim Mazumdar playwriting prize, the Jerry Jazz Musician award for short fiction, and the Chronogram Literary Fiction Award.
Her plays and musicals have been produced in several countries, as well as on NPR; her physics play, Strings, nominated for an Innovative Theatre Award, was produced at the Kennedy Center. A Hawthornden Fellow, she is on the faculty of NYU and Gotham Writers Workshop, as well as the Cape Cod Writers Center and San Miguel Writers’ Conference. She enjoys hiking, biking, horseback riding, and hunting for wild mushrooms. For more information, visit www.celawrence.com
My Opinion:
Our heroine is a young woman born into society who could do nothing more than marry well but she wanted more. So she pursued a career in journalism but was constantly sent to cover the lunches and soirees of the people in her set – just what she wanted to get away from. But fate has so much more in store for her.
What follows is a fast paced, fun (if you can call a murder mystery fun) to read book that takes the reader through both the slums and high society of late 19th century New York. It is well written and very well researched.
Elizabeth is a young woman of privilege but she wants to do more with her life than just attend teas and marry well. As she follows the trail of the murderer she learns more about the other side of society than she ever wanted to know and the reader is shown the dark side of turn of the century New York.
At times not easy to read but definitely well worth reading and it rather leaves the feeling that perhaps more books will follow. I sure hope so as Elizabeth is the kind of character that you root for and definitely would like to follow again in another adventure.
Rating:
4.5