A charming swan song for Pam and Jerry North
This was the last book in the Mr and Mrs North series, but it was the first one I read. I liked it so much that I read and reviewed all 26 of them in order. I re-read it today and still think it's one of the best in the series, although it's far from being a "typical" Pam and Jerry North mystery. It's not set in New York City and the North's friend Captain Bill Weigand of the NYPD is absent, although he appears by telephone when the action heats up.
The Norths have taken a vacation to Key West, Florida, and are basking in the sunshine, warmth, and sparkling water. It's 1963 and Key West is both quieter and more dangerous than it is today. Memories of Ernest Hemingway and President Harry Truman are fresh in the minds of the locals, but most visitors are simply people who come for relaxation in a sleepy southern town surrounded by beaches. Still, the huge Navy base dominates the island and armed ships patrol the short 90 miles separating the U.S. and Castro's Cuba.
Since the first Mr and Mrs North mystery appeared in 1940, both the authors and their readers have aged two and a half decades, but Pam North is still pretty, slim, young, and blonde. Jerry North still alternates between adoring his lovely wife and being exasperated by her obscure speech. Who else but Mrs North would slip out of bed at daybreak and leave her husband with the explanation that she's "going fishing for pelicans"?
But murder follows the Norths and soon a pleasant middle-aged doctor is dead. He's a New Yorker, too, but unknown to the Norths until they meet at a Key West resort playing doubles tennis. They're shocked by his death and even more shocked to learn that there are several people who wanted him dead.
Seems the good doctor has served as an expert witness in many trials and sent some criminals to prison. One of those criminals is in Key West. And while the doctor is well-respected, at least one widow believes that he caused her husband's death. The jury didn't agree, but is the angry widow still gunning for him? To further complicate matters, there's a slight possibility that it might be suicide. A woman resident at the resort dies after the doctor has treated her. Did he kill himself from remorse?
Chief Deputy Sheriff Ronald Jefferson is no Bill Weigand, but he's an intelligent, hard-working investigator. Furthermore, he has to do a lot of the footwork himself. Key West isn't a big police department with a sophisticated forensics team and the Sheriff is quite properly more interested in game fishing than in murders. At first suspicious of the Norths, Jefferson reluctantly takes Weigand's word that they're on the side of the angels. In the end, it's Pam North's inquisitive mind that figures out the scribbled entries in a small notebook and uncovers the identity of the murderer. It's her last case and she went out in style.
Sadly, the series came to an end when Frances Lockridge died. Richard Lockridge continued to write his other mystery books, but Pam North was too closely identified with his wife to go on writing about her. I'm so glad I discovered this series. I've read a lot of mysteries, but never ones written with more charm and wit. Pam and Jerry North are fascinating, lovable characters and the books show American life at a far different time. All 26 books in the series can be read as stand-alone books, but there's something to be said for reading them in order. Enjoy.