I'm having a murder-mystery heavy start to 2024. The latest I finished was Voyage of the Damned by Frances White, a debut. I will say that, as strictly a murder mystery, it does fall into the trap fantasy-based ones can do - the best detective stories should have you plausibly be able to get part of the way to the answer and have you go 'oh that's right' on reveal. That's not plausible here because the mystery relies on magic powers and situations we don't know the full extent of. So if you want that particular thing, you won't find it here.
That said, it doesn't matter, because while it's presented as a murder mystery what it
actually is is a delicious slice of skullduggery, politicking and devilish backstabbing. Essentially it sets up as a locked-room mystery but is actually more of a chamber-piece story (sure, the room/chamber is actually a massive lavish ship, but there's only 12 people on it and no contact with the outside world for the duration of the voyage so it counts).
Really really good fun, and I'll be looking for whatever White does next, whether it's a sequel or not (this could standalone but doesn't have to).
Now moving on to yet another detective story, Cahokia Jazz by Francis Spufford, this one falling somewhat between 'fantasy' and 'not' - there's no magic in it that I can tell (and it's not sold as a fantasy), but it is set in an alternative America where the Native American population was a lot less murdered and therefore are a much bigger part of American life. The book is set in Cahokia, which was a real city on the Mississippi up until the 1400s according to wikipedia, which survived to modernity in this world. And anyway, body found, noir murder mystery. Only a short way in but atmospheric and effective so far.
This post has been edited by polishgenius: 17 February 2024 - 10:50 PM
I can't carry it for you, but I can carry you.