The Baker Street Letters, Michael Robertson #50BookPledge

As a major Sherlock Holmes fan, this title grabbed my attention immediately. I picked it up, even though a rational part of me warned it was probably a coincidence, and Baker Street Letters had nothing to do with the detective at 221B Baker St at all. To my delight, the summary on the book cover promised a story about a pair of lawyer brothers who happen to lease 221B Baker Street and so receive letters addressed to Sherlock Holmes. I thought this book would be a Sherlockian tale, and I was both excited to read something Sherlockian and wary that Robertson would screw up his treatment of such an icon.

Fair warning: it has absolutely nothing to do with Sherlock Holmes other than the Baker Street address. That being said, it’s a solid enough mystery, with likable enough characters. Twenty years ago, an eight-year-old girl writes to ask Sherlock Holmes for help in finding her missing father. Family black sheep Nigel Heath decides to track the letter writer down. When he is suspected of murder, his rich, successful brother Reggie follows him to LA, and also gets involved in the case. Reggie’s on-again/off-again girlfriend Laura, an actress who is by far the most intelligent in their detective team, also comes to LA to help out. The letter writer’s father had been a geological surveyor investigating possible subway tunnel routes, and there are people who seem desperate to get the documents from the father that the girl had included in her letter to Sherlock Holmes.

It’s not spectacular, and if I decide to read the next book in the series, The Brothers of Baker Street, I’ll borrow it from the library. I don’t think it’s even that I was disappointed that the Sherlock Holmes connection was ultimately nothing more than a gimmick (story would so worked equally well if the eight-year-old girl had written to Nancy Drew or Hercule Poirot or even sent a message in a bottle). I love all sorts of mysteries, ranging from Arthur Conan Doyle and Agatha Christie to Diane Mott Davidson (Goldy Schulz’s catering mysteries) and Laura Levine (the hilarious Jaine Austen series). Baker Street Letters is definitely an enjoyable read, but it’s not a series I’ll keep my eye on.

The best part of Baker Street Letters is the relationship between the Heath brothers – Reggie and Nigel clearly have an intense rivalry, but just as clearly feel genuine concern and affection for each other. Laura is an engaging character, and her romance with Reggie (and past potential for romance with Nigel!) is a fun little subplot that really just makes you realize how dense Reggie is when it comes to love. The secondary characters are interesting enough, and in fact, my favourite character is probably a female grad student who helps Reggie out. The mystery is convoluted enough that I didn’t guess the answer till fairly close to the big reveal scene. Decent book, overall.

Pigeon English, Stephen Kelman #50BookPledge

Pigeon English started out just all right. Eleven year old Harrison Opoku immigrates to London from Ghana with his mother and older sister. A boy gets murdered, and no one comes forward with any information, so Harri decides to conduct his own investigation. The cover shows a blurb from Room author Emma Donoghue, calling Pigeon English Harri’s “love letter to the world,” and saying it made her “laugh and tremble all the way through.”

So when I began the book, I expected an utterly delightful narrator, who, like Flavia de Luce, turns all Hardy Boys when a mystery arrives. I was wrong. Harri definitely has charm – for example, his complete confidence that you can get a “fugly” girl pregnant just by looking at her, or the utter joy he feels when he closes his eyes and runs in the rain. However, Pigeon English is by no means a cheerful book. It can make you laugh in the way that Donoghue’s Room can make you laugh – with a tinge of sadness, because the child narrator (Jack in Room, Harri in Pigeon) notices things he finds funny, only our more adult perception tells us there’s really something more sinister going on in the subtext. Harri being eleven adds to this emotional pull, because, unlike Jack, he’s caught between the innocence of childhood and the knowledge of teenagers, and he understands more about his surroundings than he wants to.

Kelman also has a clear love for language, and peppers the novel with slang (e.g. Asweh, bo-sticks). There’s a glossary included at the end of the book, but I’d advise you not to look at it – it’s easy enough to understand the terms through the context, and I actually enjoyed not knowing the exact English translation of some of the words. It helped me immerse myself in the cadence of Harri’s speech, and just lose myself in the book. Every once in a while, Harri explained English terms – “In England there’s a hell of different words for everything. It’s for if you forget one, there’s always another one left over.” I was immediately wary that this would just make Harri too cutesy, but I ended up enjoying these commentaries. Harri’s confidence in lecturing me about English is an endearing look at his pride in learning the local slang, and is a beautiful reminder of his youth.

That being said, I did have some minor issues. First, and most annoying to me, is the speeches from the pigeon on Harri’s balcony. I’d be completely immersed in Harri’s world, then I get an italicized paragraph sounding like the voice of God, being protective and nurturing. More likely, it was meant to be the voice of Harri’s father, who is still in Ghana, leaving Harri the official man of the house. So I can imagine Harri finding comfort in the pigeon being a father figure presence. I can even imagine the pigeon being an actual guardian angel, who comments on its own helplessness in its attempt to protect Harri from his neighbourhood. I just didn’t like it. The story has enough complexity on its own, without adding such heavy handed symbolism. Another, minor one really, is whenever Harri calls the pigeon “lovely.” While it’s possible that an eleven year old boy uses “lovely” in everyday speech, it felt too much like Harri had suddenly transformed into an elderly English lady. As with the pigeon speeches, it felt too much like Kelman wanting his novel to sound beautiful, and I just didn’t like it.

I’d said earlier that Pigeon started out just all right. For the first part of the book, I mostly thought that Kelman is a good writer, and Harri is likable enough, but I didn’t feel much of an emotional connection. That’s probably because I was still in mystery book mode, and I kept wondering when Harri would make actual progress in his investigation. Then I realized the book wasn’t about the mystery at all. It’s about Harri’s struggle to control an uncontrollable situation. His neighbourhood reminds me of the film Neds, but Harri is even more helpless than the protagonist of Neds in his attempt, first to steer clear of the Dell Farm Crew gang, then when forced into it, to stand up to them. Harri, his friend Dean, and his sister Lydia are all in over their heads, and it’s almost painful to see their attempts to regain control. Control, ultimately, is what Harri’s murder investigation is about – he takes fingerprints using sellotape, watches people through camouflage binoculars from a fair, and collects saliva for DNA samples with no concrete plan beyond taking this evidence to the police. When he comes close to solving the case, and someone comes up with a false lead, Harri confesses his wish that the false lead were true, because if his current line of investigation is correct, it would be “too real.” Harri also says he prefers superheroes like Spiderman, who aren’t born with their superpowers, because it means all Harri has to do is find a radioactive spider and he can get superpowers too. It’s simply heartbreaking, because we know Harri won’t ever become a superhero, and also because we know that, deep down, Harri is old enough to know he won’t ever get superpowers either.

I finished the book moved by Harri’s courage. I was impressed by his tireless attempts to defy the odds and bring a murderer to justice, and saddened by his futile attempts to gain a superpower. Mostly, however, I was touched by all the normal childhood experiences he had – falling in love with a girl named Poppy (they carved their initials on their desks to make it official), wanting to practice with his sister’s friend before kissing Poppy, drawing Adidas stripes on his unbranded trainers with black marker. The tenderness in these moments just contrasted so sharply with the violence in the background that I just wanted Harri to experience more of these moments. It starts off a bit slow, despite the book opening with a murder, but it ends with quite an impact. Pigeon English is a beautiful story of a boy struggling to hold on to his innocence while being forced to experience so much more than he can handle.

A Red Herring without Mustard, Alan Bradley #50BookPledge

I am a major Flavia de Luce fan. She’s an 11 year old Nancy Drew meets Sherlock Holmes with a Sheldon Cooper-esque IQ, solving mysteries in an Agatha Christie/Caroline Graham world. She boils tea in a Bunsen burner, uses science to play pranks on her older sisters, and misses her mother, who died when Flavia was too young to remember anything about her. Charming, precocious, and vulnerable, Flavia is probably the most endearing heroine I’ve encountered in contemporary fiction.

So I come into Red Herring without Mustard as a fan, and am thrilled to see at the end of the book that there is a Flavia de Luce fan club! The book begins with Flavia accidentally setting fire to a Gypsy’s tent and inviting the Gypsy to park her caravan on Flavia’s family’s land. As any mystery fan knows, it’s never a good idea to accept an invitation from an amateur detective, and (SPOILER ALERT!) sure enough, the Gypsy is murdered.

The mystery itself is a good, solid, convoluted tale. I didn’t find it as interesting as Sweetness at the Bottom of the Pie (The Weed that Strings a Hangman’s Bag is still on my To-Read list), but it’s still a good mystery that kept me guessing. Still, you don’t necessarily read a Flavia de Luce tale for the myriad twists and turns of the plot. A Flavia de Luce tale is a lark, a fun, charming read where you fall in love with Bishop’s Lacey and the characters who live in it. And what a lark this tale is! Without giving too much away, I just have to say, I love Flavia’s mirror trick. Pure genius.

Flavia also comes up with some gems of wisdom that I, as a lifelong mystery buff, just want to highlight and quote to others over and over again. One insight in particular just blew me away: “I’ve recently come to the conclusion that the nursery rhyme riddle is the most basic form of the detective story. It’s a mystery stripped of all but the essential facts.”  Wow. Yes, absolutely yes. The Flavia de Luce stories are an homage to this notion (Bradley’s titles are very nursery rhyme-like), and an homage as well to Agatha Christie, with so many of her mysteries referring to nursery rhymes (One, Two, Buckle My Shoe, Hickory Dickory Dock, A Pocket Full of Rye, “Four and Twenty Blackbirds”). I’m a lifelong mystery buff, and a major Agatha Christie fan, and so this just made me fall even more in love with the Flavia de Luce series.

Bradley also gives us a beautiful look at Flavia’s vulnerability in Red Herring. Flavia finds out a bit more about her mother, and we see how much Flavia wishes she had known her mother, and how much Flavia wishes she could be confident in her mother’s love for her. Flavia is so intelligent that it’s sometimes easy to forget she’s still a child, and Red Herring reminds us of this in subtle, heartbreaking, beautifully written scenes.

Loveable character, wonderful book, amazing series. Someone told me recently that the only negative thing she can say about the Flavia de Luce series is that there aren’t enough books in it. So to that customer and any other fellow Flavia fans, here’s some good news: according to his author biography, Alan Bradley’s already working on the next Flavia de Luce mystery. Any chance of a book tour with a Toronto stop, Mr. Bradley?