Mary Stewart was a new author to me in 2022 when a friend recommended her books and what a delightful author she
is! Madam,
Will You Talk? was her first book and it is
a cracker.
Set in Southern France, it is a suspenseful story that doesn’t waste any
time in plunging the reader into murder and mystery.
When I wrote that summer,
and asked my friend Louise if she would come with me on a car trip to Provence,
I had no idea that I might be issuing an invitation to danger…though the part I
was to play in the tragedy was to break and re-form the pattern of my whole
life, yet it was a very minor part, little more than a walk-on in the last
act…How was I to know, that lovely quiet afternoon, that most of the actors in
the tragedy were at that moment assembled in this neat, unpretentious little
Provençal hotel?
Charity Selbourne, a twenty-eight year old woman, and the book’s heroine,
narrates the story. I warmed to her character immediately when she befriended a
lonely and deeply unhappy twelve-year-old boy. It’s not the usual stuff of
romantic suspense but in one of Mary Stewart’s other books (Nine
Coaches Waiting) she sympathetically portrays another young
boy. I read in her obituary that:
Mary Stewart’s writing is beautiful and descriptive, and reflects not only
her own personal experience but also her interests and educational background.
There is an abundance of literary allusions, nods to the classics, and
knowledge of theatre and art scattered throughout this book. Her rendering of
place/setting, in this case the south of France, in particular Avignon and
Marseille, play their role as characters in the story - as does a dog!
Then fate, in the shape of Nidhug,
took a hand.
My cue had come. I had to enter the stage.
Avignon is a walled city,
as I have said, a compact and lovely little town skirted to the north and west
by the Rhone and circled completely by medieval ramparts, none the less lovely,
to my inexpert eye, for having been heavily restored in the nineteenth century.
The city us dominated from the north by the Rocher des Doms, a steep mass of
white rock crowned by the cathedral of Notre Dame, and green with singing
pines.
le
Rocher des Doms à Avignon | Avignon et Provence (avignon-et-provence.com)
The deserted town of Les Baux, in medieval times a
strong and terrible fortress, stands high over the southern plains. The streets
of eyeless houses - little more than broken shells - the crumbling lines of the
once mighty bastions, the occasional jewel of a carved Renaissance window,
clothed with ferns, have an uncanny beauty of their own, while something of the
fierce and terrible history of the ‘wolves of Les Baux,’ the lords of Orange
and Kings of Arles, still seems to inhere in these broken fortifications.
Les
Baux-de-Provence Travel Guide - France - Eupedia
I saw the first light, fore-running the
sun, gather in a cup of the eastern cloud, gather and grow and brim, till at
last it spilled like milk over the golden lip, to smear the dark face of heaven
from end to end.
In addition to her quality writing is an exciting, convoluted plot with many
twists, including a thrilling car chase through the Rhône-Alpes. I enjoyed the
(highly improbable) romance and the old-fashioned feel which reminded me of
Agatha Christies’ The
Man in the Brown Suit and (just a little) of Helen MacInnes’ writing
style.
A wonderful read on a rainy day for me, and best of all, I have two more of
her books waiting for me.
4 comments:
I read that book recently, and it was a page-turner, as every one of hers I have read has been. I really enjoy them for that aspect, which if I'm listening to the story, helps me get my kitchen really clean! In any case, yes, her prose is unsurpassed, and her descriptions of scenes and scenery are such that I can easily envision them without feeling it a chore.
I agree that the romance was unlikely, but it was exciting for sure ;-) Her heroines are always spunky, and sometimes a little reckless. This is the second one I've read in which she is coming to the aid of a child caught in the middle of adult drama, and I enjoy that part of the story.
Thanks for highlighting this good writer!
Sounds good!
Hi Gretchen Joanna, It's so good to find an author that writes recent fiction in a literary style. :)
Hi Emma, she's a good writer.
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