The Deep End by Julie Mulhern
Synopsis /
Swimming into the lifeless body of her husband’s mistress tends to ruin a woman’s day, but becoming a murder suspect can ruin her whole life.
It’s 1974 and Ellison Russell’s life revolves around her daughter and her art. She’s long since stopped caring about her cheating husband, Henry, and the women with whom he entertains himself. That is, until she becomes a suspect in Madeline Harper’s death. The murder forces Ellison to confront her husband’s proclivities and his crimes—kinky sex, petty cruelties and blackmail.
As the body count approaches par on the seventh hole, Ellison knows she has to catch a killer. But with an interfering mother, an adoring father, a teenage daughter, and a cadre of well-meaning friends demanding her attention, can Ellison find the killer before he finds her?
My Thoughts /
Country Club. What first springs to my mind when I hear those two words are sprawling brilliantly green impeccably manicured golf courses, men in neat slacks wearing collared shirts, white socks and golf shoes; women wearing tailored shorts or skirts with a matching shirt, cute white socks with matching coloured golf shoes. Sitting down for drinks and canapé after finishing "the back 9". Tennis Courts. Swimming Pools. Restaurants. Memberships.
And then…. there's the "Country Club" in this story!!!
It’s 1974 and Ellison Walford Russell is doing fine, well except for the fact that her husband is missing and his girlfriend is dead. So, yes, apart from that life is going swimmingly…..then:
My morning swim doesn’t usually involve corpses. If it did, I’d give up swimming for something less stressful, like coaxing cobras out of baskets or my mother out of bed before ten. Watching the sun rise over the seventh green is often the best part of my day. I dive into the pool while the water is still inky. When the light has changed from deepest indigo to lavender, I break my stroke, tread water and admire the sky as it bleeds from gold to yellow to pink. It’s a ritual, a metaphorical cleansing, a moment of stolen peace.
Swimming into the lifeless body of her husband’s mistress tends to ruin a woman’s day, but becoming a murder suspect can ruin her whole life.
A murder suspect. Me. Ellison Walford Russell. Mother was going to kill me.
This is my first Julie Mulhern read and this reader thought it was a well-written cozy mystery that thoroughly entertained me from the first to the last page. Mulhern's main character, Ellison Russell is an artist – she sees colour and pattern in everything and as such her vocabulary is descriptively rich and vivid. Set in the 70's, the younger generation of today might think of that as "historical-fiction", but this reader grew up in the 70's, so for me the 70's references were a reminiscent trip along memory lane.
To the story: Ellison's life revolves around her daughter and her art. Unhappily married, she's long since stopped caring about her cheating husband, Henry and the long line of women with whom he liaises. But when one of those "other women" turn up dead, floating in the Country Club pool, Ellison somehow becomes the police's number #1 suspect! Country Club life just got difficult. The people whom she thought of as friends were eyeing her suspiciously and gossiping over lunch. In an effort to take herself off the suspect list, Ellison begins her own investigation.
This was a fast-paced read with engaging characters. Mulhern writes with wry humour and that is always an added bonus for this reader. Writing with humour makes even the most annoying characters somehow a little more likeable.
Funny, compassionate and endearing, The Deep End is a well-crafted cozy, with murder, mayhem and a touch of humour, I'm looking forward to adding the rest of the series to my TBR.