Reviewed by Jeanne
Professor Jaya Jones has found her niche as a tenure-track history
professor in California, but her life is about to get a bit more
complicated. Shaken by the news that
former boyfriend Rupert has died in a car accident in Scotland, she arrives
home to find a package containing a heavy gold anklet with a large ruby. It’s obviously very old, and appears to be
Indian. But it’s the note that throws
her for a loop: it’s from Rupert. He says that he’s sending her the item for
safekeeping because there’s no one else he can trust.
The postmark is the same day as his fatal accident—if it was
an accident.
The trouble is that Jaya’s expertise isn’t Indian history, but
rather the East India Company and colonial India. She’s going to have to find someone else who
knows about Indian history, specifically jewelry, to figure out exactly what
Rupert has sent her and if it got him killed.
With a possible killer on the loose, Jaya accepts the help of
graduate student Lane Peters whose specialty is Indian art. But like Rupert,
Jaya has to ask herself the question: who can I trust?
I started reading Gigi Pandian with her delightful Secret Staircase Mystery series, and
soon discovered that she had other books.
Jaya Jones was her first series and Artifact is the first
book in that series. Like some of her other
heroines, Jaya is mixed race: part Asian Indian and part European as is Pandian
herself. It makes for an interesting
cultural backdrop, which I enjoyed, and plays into the mystery too. Jaya is
big-hearted, action-oriented, and deeply loyal, not to mention smart and brave.
The mystery is fast paced, with a lot of twists and turns as Jaya
drops everything and heads to the UK to try to find out not only what happened to
Rupert but how he came across such an unusual and valuable artifact. It’s obvious that Pandian knows the territory
well, both the historical and geographic.
While there were a few plot threads I may have had doubts about, it didn’t
stop me from having a lot of fun with this book. I also was aware that this was
not only a first in series book, but a debut novel. With that in mind, I felt she handled a
complex plot and characters quite well. It’s quite the page turner.
I’ll be reading more of
Jaya’s adventures as well as dipping into another of her series about an
alchemist.
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