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Saturday, July 10, 2010

Drake's Bay by T.A. Robert

Here is a review that I was unable to post during mystery week due to technical problems. So please enjoy.

-The Queen of the Quill




Drake's Bay by T.A. Robert
Publisher: The Permanent Press
Genre: Mystery
Hardback 239 pages
Book Source: Free Library of Philadelphia
My Rating: 93/100
Recommended By: Jenna A from Luxury Reading
From Goodreads:

On a quiet Sunday morning in San Francisco, scholar Ethan Storey and his girlfriend are touring an open house in the hills. It is an archive of rare books and Ethan comes to believe that the rarest of the rare may be here: the logbooks of the 1577–1580 world voyage of Sir Francis Drake. These have been lost to history—suppressed by Queen Elizabeth, who thought they contained the state secrets of the Northwest Passage. Where had Drake sailed? A brass plate purportedly left behind by Drake near San Francisco Bay and found in the 1930s had been accepted as genuine, then exposed as fraud, re-validated and exposed again. It was always suspected that the actual records of the voyage might still exist, and if found would make the plate, validated, a treasure for its owner. But if the powerful California family that held the “plate of brass” was desperate for cash, yet would rather destroy the logbooks than see them made public, something else must be going on.

The logbooks are the nexus of a contemporary story of greed as violent and conspiratorial as anything in the sixteenth century. As Ethan, a university professor in midlife with doubts about his much younger lover, searches for the logs, he also discovers much more about her, his emotionally detached father, and the power of historical events to shape our lives.




My Thoughts:

I read a review of this book over at Luxury Reading and instantly requested it from the library. I was not disappointed. The story opens with an innocent tour of an odd looking house, the Williams Institute in the hills of San Francisco. The Institute has an extensive private book collection, which is in dire need of a historian to help assess its value. In the blink of an eye history professor Ethan Storey decides to help and just as quickly he is drawn into a mystery regarding Sir Francis Drake's lost log books.

The action is pretty fast, and some of the things that happen were quite surprising. As for character development, I never felt like I got to know Storey's wife, Kay. Even when I was finished I still wasn't sure about her. As a matter of fact, I'm not that fond of her either. Ethan I liked and thought he was pretty developed. I got to know him and his quirks, and he was quite endearing. If there is another book that features Professor Storey, I would definitely read it.
There was a slow spot in the beginning when Storey (love the name) is sailing his boat up the coast and the descriptions are nautical like sails and stuff. I did not have a clue as to what he was talking about, and almost considered putting the book down. However, I sucked it up and these pages passed quickly until the end of the story where there is a, I guess you could say, high speed chase across the waters surrounding San Francisco. Those parts I read eagerly and straight through until finished due to the suspense and anticipation of what was going to happen next. Apparently I could figure out the nautical jargon enough so you can too. Don't let those beginning few pages dissuade you. Consequently, I was late for work the next day, so thanks Mr. Robert!

All in all this was a delightful book and I was surprised at how the mystery worked out. I will certainly look into the author's previous books and if Professor Storey makes another appearance, I'm there.



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2 comments:

Dwayne said...

Wow, this is so different from the books I always read!

Jenny Girl said...

I would definitely consider getting this one. It was different from my usual fare and I was not disappointed. Thanks for commenting.