3.5 stars.
Kate March, precocious seventeen-year old and budding investigative reporter, aiming for a career writing for "The Messenger", the long-running newspaper and family-owned business. When she finds out that "The Messenger" is in trouble financially, she knows they need a story to set them apart from all their competitors. And one practically falls in her lap, when she hears of the death of a Hollywood cinema director, William Desmond Taylor. It's the era and silent films, and Kate, living in L.A., knows an actress, Mary Miles Minter, who is involved in what turns out to be a case with lots of interest, from its Hollywood director and the stars he knew well, the salacious rumours and behaviour of Hollywood actors and actresses, and the way this behaviour somehow keeps getting hushed up by L.A.'s District Attorney.
Kate takes it upon herself to visit the crime scene before any of her competitors' reporters, and uses her connection to Mary, and her intelligence, ability to think on her feet and burning need to save the family business, to uncover a mess of motives, messy behaviours of the parties involved, and lots of secrets before discovering the killer.
I had not realized many of the people referenced in this book were real, and this was a real murder case in 1922 Los Angeles that remains unsolved. I really liked how author Lori Adams wove in the facts with Kate's activities, and gave her a friend equally in love with snooping/sleuthing, Addy, to help Kate get in and out of some sticky situations.
Adams also deals with the pain of loss from WW1: two of Kate's brothers were killed in combat, and Kate's mother abandoned the family after news of her sons' deaths. Kate is still grieving and holds a lot of anger about her mother's abandonment, while one of her neighbours, who is also a policeman, is dealing with his own bad memories from the War, and these elements are also woven into this mystery.
The pace is pretty good, with Kate moving through L.A. as she searches for clues and interviews people. I liked the period detail, and though this probably wasn't intended, I was reminded of the movie "Double Indemnity" as the story is told with Kate in an interrogation room with one of the Detectives on the case; she relates all her actions in her investigation in a series of flashbacks.
As a first novel in a series, I think the author sets up the main character and her friends well, and I might be persuaded to read Kate's next adventure.
Thank you to Netgalley and to Spyhop Publishing for this ARC in exchange for my review.