THE SPOOKS LIGHTS AFFAIR
By Marcia Muller & Bill Pronzini
A Forge Book
250 pages
There have been several husband and wife mystery-writing teams
in the past but only two have ever both won the coveted MWA Grand Masters
award; Margaret Millar and Ross McDonald and the authors of this book. “The Spooks Lights Affair” is part of their
Carpenter and Quincannon series and if this entry is representative of the
earlier cases, we may have to go dig them up.
In 1895 San
Francisco, Sabina Carter and John Quincannon are
partners of a well known and respected private detective agency. Although they usually work as a team, in
this book we find them handling their
own individual cases.
Carter has been hired by the wealthy St. Ives family to
shadow their rebellious, overly romantic daughter, Virginia. It has come to their attention that the girl
has been seeing handsome young store clerk who does not meet their upper-crusty
standards for an acceptable suitor.
Alas, the girl is frustrated by having the tenacious private eye on her
heels constantly. On a fog shrouded
night, while both are attending a sumptuous gala hosted by the mayor; Virginia attempts to
elude Carter and dashes up the side of a steep hill where she commits suicide
by throwing herself off a cliff.
As tragic as these events are, they take a quick turn
towards the mysterious when an extensive search of the area below the cliffs
fails to find Virginia’s
body. It has somehow disappeared,
vanished into thin air.
Meanwhile the always ambitious Quincannon is attempting to
hunt down the solo bandit who robbed a local Wells Fargo office of thirty-five
thousand dollars. The bank has offered up
a tidy reward for anyone who can find the culprit, bring him to justice and
retrieve the stolen funds. Thus it would
seem the sleuthing partners are dealing with two separate cases. But when they compare their notes, they
discover that several of the people they are investigating have connections to
one another. How is dead girl’s older
brother connected to one of the shadier figures involved with the bank
heist? What was the true role of the
dead girl’s beau in her demise and subsequent disappearance? Is he also part of the daring robbery?
The plot is complex and fun to follow. Even more so is the authentic setting in
which it plays out as Carter and Quincannon give us a wonderful tour of San
Francisco in its gilded era from the infamous Barbary Coast to the rich
Tenderloin gambling houses and garish brothels that catered to the city’s
wealthiest men. “The Spook Lights
Affair” is both a terrific mystery plus a rollicking time-travel adventure
populated with truly colorful figures both fictional and historical. It is a fun romp by two masters of their
craft who obviously enjoy working together much to their readers’ delights.
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