The roaring 20’s is such an interesting timeline; I think the only book that comes to mind for that era is The Great Gatsby, which I absolutely dislike. So, I have been pleasantly surprised with these Ever After Mysteries.
With Murder at the Empire, author Cathe Swanson brings in many of the large components of the time, such as prohibition, women’s rights, flappers, and the Ritz life, through the eyes of an organist for the movie palace. Gayle is struggling to fit in as an organist in a “man’s world” and to top it all off, her boss has disappeared, expensive artifacts are disappearing, and are people being murdered?
Like always, I am more critical of short stories. You have to be able to give all the details we need to be able to solve the mystery, give us enough character development to be invested, and then not make everything feel rushed: this book hit all those points and I was so pleased by it!
Our character Gayle wasn’t particularly my favorite. I felt that she was wishy-washy at times. She wanted to tell someone about the way she was treated and then was upset when the manager would confront the people treating her poorly. So I was confused as to what she actually wanted, and when other scenarios would come up, it would just rub me wrong. I debated within myself if this was a deliberate use of character since she is in her younger years and developing into a mature woman, but at the same time I would have thought a lot of those flip-flop nature of learning to stand up for yourself would have developed especially during this day and age.
I really really enjoyed the sprinkling of a lot of historical information that didn’t feel like an info dump. I thought the author really did a phenomenal job of that. And the mystery had almost a hint of Agatha Christie-ness to it. Really loved that.
Not knowing too much about the fairy-tale, The Nightingale, I can’t really give you too much to compare with but I think that the whole glitzy life really worked at the inspiration with the novel.