Book Reviewed: The Keepsake (2009)
Author: Tess Gerritsen
Available from: Rainy Day Books, or other fine
booksellers.
I was pre-sold to love this book. I mean, mummies and murder! What about that is not interesting? I spotted this book on my aunt’s bookshelf
when I was visiting last fall, and chose it with positive expectations. However, I immediately ran into problems with
it.
First problem: it starts with a prologue. I
generally hate prologues. I’ve rarely
read one I felt delivered information we couldn’t have learned in the story
itself. I've read so many pointless prologues, that lately I have to fight to keep an open
mind about the skill of the writer, whenever I run into another [expletive
deleted] prologue.
Worse, there’s an unnamed, first-person narrator in
this [expletive deleted] prologue, and s/he is muttering about fuzzy facts and
talking in unspecified time frames. I
hate that. It was cryptic to the point
of I-started-skimming-very-rapidly.
Thank goodness that stuff is done with, when the [expletive deleted]
prologue ends. If it had gone on much
longer I would never have finished the book.
Once I got into the story proper, the writing improved dramatically, but then I encountered what I came to think of as the “TV interference.”
Once I got into the story proper, the writing improved dramatically, but then I encountered what I came to think of as the “TV interference.”
The names are the same, but TV changed things! |
One reason I was intrigued to try the book was that
it was billed as a “Rizzoli & Isles” novel.
Yep, I watch the show. It’s not
my utter favorite cop drama on TV (too many high-heel foot-chase scenes and long
hair not pulled back at crime scenes or the morgue, for two reasons), but I like it enough to have
programmed a “series record” command for it on my DVR.
Yeah, I know TV is a different medium and
storytelling must be done in different ways, but I was not quite prepared to
see exactly how much the TV show has deviated from the original books. I kind of expected the characters to seem . .
. familiar.
So I’m reading along, and--wait. Frost is blond? And married?
Jane has a husband and a daughter?
Maura's in love with a priest?? Yikes!
Who are these people? The names sound familiar, the setting is
Boston . . . but woah. Okay: not the TV
show at all. Major reset! But once I stopped expecting them to be people
with the same names that I knew from TV, I found the characters likable and
interesting.
So,
all right, I had some problems getting started.
But once I got past the [expletive deleted] prologue and the
character-cognitive-dissonance, what about the story?
Mummification: part of a unique M.O.! |
Actually, that was pretty cool. Good villain, some
logical but unexpected plot twists, plus did I mention the combination of
mummies and murder?
I liked Josephine, the murderer’s main "target,"
and especially the way she tried to fight back, even when she was at a huge
disadvantage. On the other hand, there
were several times when she had maddening blind spots.
I did kind of see the end coming. It followed a
formula that's become kind of standard, especially on TV, and this wasn't
written long enough ago to be a new approach. I would like for the author to
have thought harder about "what if X realizes this, at that point?"
to make the denouement take less predictable turns.
But (except for the prologue) it was pretty well written, and quite readable, and the archaeology angle was a lot of fun. Would I say it was worth the time? Yeah, I would. But you probably could skip the prologue, and don’t expect the characters to be much like what you remember from TV!
But (except for the prologue) it was pretty well written, and quite readable, and the archaeology angle was a lot of fun. Would I say it was worth the time? Yeah, I would. But you probably could skip the prologue, and don’t expect the characters to be much like what you remember from TV!
IMAGE CREDITS: Many thanks to Tess Gerritsen's Website for the cover image! The First Seasoon Rizzoli & Isles show poster is courtesy of the "Sylum Clan" Blog. The photo of the mummy and sarcophagus is from the Dead Media Archive.
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