Posts Tagged ‘society couple’
AN ACT OF VILLAINY by Ashley Weaver: Book Review
Once again I am green with envy reading about Amory Ames and her life in 1930s London. Amory is the beautiful, smart, wealthy heroine of several mysteries by Ashley Weaver, and her life sounds almost perfect to me. The caveat almost has to be used because her marriage to Milo has always been somewhat “iffy” due to his less-than-monogamous behavior. But that seems to be in the past, and in An Act of Villainy the Ameses seem to be a happy, loving couple.
While leaving a West End theater one night, Amory and Milo are greeted by Gerard Holloway, a friend of Milo’s. Gerard is a wealthy man who has just written his first play, The Price of Victory, and it is about to open. In addition to being the play’s author, he is also producing (read financing) and directing it, so obviously he has a lot at stake in its success.
During their very brief conversation outside the theater, Amory innocently asks Gerard about his wife, a woman whom Amory greatly admires. After Gerard rather tepidly says that “she’s quite well,” he moves off and Milo looks quizzically at his wife. Didn’t you know, he asks her, that his new play’s leading lady is his mistress?
The next day Milo meets Gerard at the latter’s club for a drink, and Gerard confides that Flora Bell, his paramour, has been receiving threatening anonymous letters at the theater. Knowing of the Ameses’ past successes in solving mysteries, the playwright asks them to attend his play’s dress rehearsal to see if they notice anyone behaving in a guilty manner, and Milo now puts the matter before his wife.
Amory agrees to go to the rehearsal, although she is upset with Gerard’s philandering. As she says to her husband, “this seems a minor matter” because if someone really wanted to harm the actress they would hardly warn her beforehand. In this, however, Amory couldn’t be more wrong.
Ms. Weaver has written another beguiling novel that bring today’s reader back nearly one hundred years to a social set and time quite different from our own, or at least from mine. Amory has a lady’s maid, Milo has a chauffeur, afternoon tea is a ritual, and they have three homes. It’s a charming fantasy life to read about, but there’s an excellent mystery here as well.
I often wonder how authors can write a novel about a time and place in which they never lived. Ms. Weaver, as far as I can tell from brief biographical notes I’ve read, has never lived in England; in fact, she is a librarian in Louisiana. But her fertile imagination and creativity will make you believe that, in a former life, she was a member of London high society.
You can read more about Ashley Weaver at this website.
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