Shades of Grey by Clea Simon
Reviewed by Jeanne
It’s
a sensation known to many who have loved and lost a pet: a glimpse out
of the corner of the eye of a familiar furry shape, the scratch of claws
walking down a hallway at night when there’s no one left to walk, the
sudden weight of something jumping on the bed, only there’s nothing
really there but memories.
That’s the situation for Dulcie
Schwartz, still grieving the loss of her beloved cat, Mr. Grey. The rest
of her life isn’t going any better. She’s a struggling graduate student
at Harvard, trying to come up with a topic for her dissertation. She’s
working as a temp at an insurance company, doing endless data entry.
Her best friend and roommate Suze has taken a job out of town, so Dulcie
is having to share space with Tim Worthington, a spoiled rich kid.
Things are about to get worse.
On
her way home, Dulcie is startled to see a cat resembling her late pet
and seems to hear a voice say, “I wouldn’t go in if I were you.” She
turns, but sees no one except the cat who is now placidly washing its
face.
Whatever the source, it turns out to have been good
advice, because once inside she finds Tim has been murdered—with
Dulcie’s mother’s second best carving knife, no less.
What
follows is well-crafted mystery with numerous suspects and several
intriguing (and topical) subplots that dangle in front of the reader
like ribbons teasing a kitten. Readers who enjoy an academic setting
will have a field day with Dulcie’s struggle to find some new reading of
an early novel that might keep her grant money flowing, not to mention
the wonderfully atmospheric library, nicely juxtaposed against modern
computers which hold key clues.
Then there’s a hint of the
paranormal with the mysterious messages from someone, offering cryptic
advice. Is it the ghost of Mr. Grey, still looking out for Dulcie? Or
is it only her subconscious, desperate to hold on to some part of her
beloved pet? Or has the stress and strain finally gotten to Dulcie, and
she’s losing her grip on reality, just like a heroine in a gothic novel?
There
are some interesting secondary characters as well. My favorite is Lucy,
Dulcie’s flower child mother who advises burning sage to clear out the
bad vibes from the apartment and offers tarot readings but whose love is
unconditional. Let me amend that: Lucy is my favorite human, because
Mr. Grey, alive or deceased, is also quite the star. (Tidbit: Mr. Grey
is based on Simon’s beloved Cyrus, who crossed the Rainbow Bridge some
years ago.)
One observation I am compelled to make: Dulcie
obviously has not been reading the BPL Bookblog. If she had, she would
have read Nancy’s review of Behind Bars, Surviving Prison
by Jeffrey Ian Ross and Stephen C. Richards (365.6 ROS Main) and she
would have known to KEEP HER MOUTH SHUT. (Dulcie’s best friend, a law
student, repeats this information but too late.)
The only real
complaint I have is that the print is a bit small for my taste. A sign
of my advancing age, I know. Alas, there doesn’t seem to be a large
print version available as yet. Let’s hope the publisher takes the
hint. However, my plus sized feline supermodel Melon wished to lodge a
complaint about the lack of scenes with cats eating. I pointed out to
him that Mr. Grey is deceased, but he considered that quibbling.
This
is the first in a new series for Simon, who also writes the Theda
Krakow mysteries, reviewed here in July (look for “A Muse Named Musetta”
in the archive). She knows her setting, her English majors and music,
and her cats, which gives the books an authenticity that some mysteries
lack. There are a few comments about modern scholarship and the
desperate quest to find something fresh about a topic that brought back
memories of college papers past.
Grey Matters, the second book in the series, has been written and is due out in March 2010.
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