This is the second in the author’s Jaya Jones Treasure Hunt mystery series. I listened to the book in audio and enjoyed both the narration and the story. In the latest adventure Jaya goes through a web of old family letters, murder, mystery, and a treasure map. This adventure finds Jaya going from San Francisco to India.
As the book opens, a stranger comes to Jaya for help with a lost family treasure, related somehow, to her great-granduncle, a hero who died in the Great San Francisco earthquake of 1906. Or was he a hero? The stranger found Jaya through publicity of her last adventure (the recovery of treasure in Scotland), wants Jaya’s help with his family treasure, and shows her a treasure map that supposedly reveals the missing treasure. When someone turns up murdered, the map becomes even more intriguing.
This isn’t the only mystery Jaya deals with. She hasn’t seen Lane Peters, the man she “fell for” since her last adventure. With his shady background, he’s been hiding from the publicity of the Scotland adventure. Jaya decides to reach out to him to talk about the latest mystery, but instead of being happy to see her, he shows no interest in the mystery and tells her their relationship is through. As a result, Jaya ropes in a few more of her colleagues at the University for help with translating the map. Along the way, the map leads Jaya to such historical events as piracy, the Indian independence movement, Chinese fishermen, and of course gold, as well as a lot of modern danger.
While the bulk of the story is told in the present, we also get flashbacks to Jaya’s relative in the early 1900s. I’m not a huge fan of flashbacks in general, but these didn’t dominate the story, and helped let us know what happened in the past from her relative’s perspective.
We get to learn more about Jaya’s backstory in this book, and even meet her father for a brief period. We also see much more of Sanjay, her “best friend” she plays music with twice a week, and who happens to be a magician.
How can a struggling assistant professor afford to drop everything at a moment’s notice and fly to India? How can she afford to hop on domestic flights in India? And wherever she goes, how do others seeking the treasure seem to end up there as well? I’m not sure, and I just didn’t care. I was along for the fun of the adventure. I thoroughly enjoyed this and look forward to more adventures in the next book. I would give this a B, so four stars here.