Brooklyn Graves: An Erica Sonato Mystery
L**S
I good yarn that is believable
This was a very enjoyable book - and i managed to read it over one weekend as i was quite entranced with wanting to mare about the Tiffany angle to the book. I have also read the previous book Brooklyn Bones and enyoyed it almost as much as this one.I good yarn that is believable, about everyday life and death and murder - the description of Brooklyn makes me want to book a flight and visit the Green-wood cemetery to see for myself
J**E
History & Mystery
I would like to thank NetGalley and Poisoned Pen Press for giving me the opportunity to read this in exchange for an honest and open review.It was only after I finished this book that I realised it was the third in the series. I will certainly be reading the previous 2 books.This novel combines 2 of my favourite subjects, history and mystery. I studied American History at University and was fascinated by the topic.There are twists and turns throughout the story. It kept me turning the pages as I was desperate to find out what was going to happen next.I look forward to reading many more books by Triss Stein.
T**P
FAILED TO GRAB BY ATTENTION, QUITE LABOURED
While researching the tough Brownsville neighbourhood of the 1930s at the local library, Erica meets bright high school senior Savanna Lafayette. When Savanna is found badly beaten a few days later, Erica realizes that she knew Savanna’s mother, Zora, when they were classmates at Brooklyn College and offers to help. Erica and Zora soon must deal with the death of one of Savanna’s young friends. Meanwhile, in the course of Erica’s research into Brownsville’s criminal past and its notorious gangsters, she interviews two elderly women, whose childhood memories lead her on another archival search, involving the role of boxing as a way out of poverty and fading memories of long ago crimes.As stated above, I couldn't get into this book at all really. If I hadn't been asked to write a review on it, I would probably have given up after about 100 of the 242 pages. I did keep going and it improved marginally enough to merit a second star.There were several threads in the book that were not very well woven together and the story veered off at tangents away from the main investigation too many times for my liking. It is quite a short book but seemed a fair amount longer as it meandered towards a not particularly inspiring ending.The author clearly knows her stuff about Brooklyn and its history but I think could have better used this knowledge in spicing up the story significantly. The book is certainly not a turkey but is just below average and was easily forgotten only a few days after I had read it.Digger95Breakaway Reviewers were given a copy of the book to review
P**Y
Well worth reading
Second book in the series. Great New York stories that delve into the history of the city with fictional stories but with that great sense of authenticity. I’ll be reading the third.
J**K
Differrent and Interesting
I have been really lucky in my choices of books I have read so far in January of 2016. Including Brooklyn Secrets. Triss Stein has kept up her terrific work in this third book of her series. If you are looking for a fast fast-paced mystery--this isn't it. This is a remarkable look at Brooklyn, at it's history and how the author sees it now. I felt like I was invited to visit, and was viewing it through her (Triss Stein's) eyes. I could actually touch, smell and see Brooklyn.Erica Donato is a wonderful, strong and very sympathetic character. As a urban history grad student I loved following her through all her research, the push she had to find all the answers. I also loved the way she made new and interesting friends, spent time with them, learnt from them and offered them help when needed. Erica is also a great (single) mom with a very interesting and accomplished 15 year old daughter who brings a lot of color to the story.I would recommend this book to anyone who would like to read a slightly different mystery and who would enjoy learning something about Brooklyn, now and it's history.
H**O
History isn't dead, but nice people are--
You might think that a tale revolving around old letters and stained glass windows (in a cemetery, no less) would be peaceful and leisurely. Well, not in Brooklyn. There's beauty, yes, and some dust, but little peace for Erica Donato, who's got a dissertation to finish, a part-time job that's just been complicated by a pompous academic, a teenage daughter (need I say more?), and unpleasant dramas ripping through her neighborhood and personal life. There's a lot to enjoy here about the evolution of Brooklyn up to the current day, and how this enormous, diverse borough keeps being shaped and remade by the people who decide to make it their home.I loved the way the issue of grieving was addressed. Sometimes, in soft-boiled mysteries, the deaths of characters seem not to be anything more than plot points, excuses for the story to begin. Erica's own grief over the loss of her daughter's father years ago is triggered by the loss of a family friend, another father and husband. The way she negotiates her own memories with her daughter, and tries to reach out to a family whose grief she understands too well is handled very sensitively and realistically, I think, which added depth to the story and a parallel line of contemporary family drama to the ones suspected in the past. Come for the mystery, stay for the history!
E**E
A Fine Mystery
"Brooklyn Graves" is the second book in a series that has all of the features a reader could want: mystery, adventure, history, and an intelligent and compelling protagonist. This book leads Erica Donato to the Green-Wood Cemetery in Brooklyn where a crime has taken place. While investigating the crime, Erica learns about the Tiffany windows that adorn the mausoleum and the history that brought them to this unusual setting. Both books in this series have vivid descriptions of Brooklyn neighborhoods that enhance the plot, and I am eagerly looking forward to reading about Erica's next adventure.
K**U
Worth the Read
Well written book, with plenty of back-history of Brooklyn and this cemetery featured in Brooklyn Graves. The plot involves a PhD candidate in Art History, widow Erica Donato, trying to find out why her friend and part-time cemetery guard was killed at the cemetery. She is also sifting out clues to what happened to a noted Brooklyn family many years ago and why a Tiffany window from their mausoleum is missing, as well as other Tiffany windows from other cemeteries.The plot comes together neatly at the end. This book is a swift read and very enjoyable.
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