Death Mask (Ellis Peters)

April 21, 2016 Book Reviews 4 ★★★★½

Death Mask (Ellis Peters)Death Mask by Ellis Peters
Published by Open Road Media on March 1, 2016 (first published 1959)
Genres: Mystery, Suspense
Pages: 126
Format: Kindle or ebook
Source: the publisher
Purchase: Amazon | Barnes & Noble
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four-half-stars
Also by this author: The Piper on the Mountain

The moment Evelyn Manville enlists in the British Army, his thoughts turn to Dorothy Grieve. He’s loved her since they were children, and now he can finally ask her to be his wife. But when she refuses, the heartbroken Evelyn flees to the fringes of the British empire, and doesn’t return to London for sixteen years. He’s been home just three hours before he runs into his former love, and his old feelings come flooding back. This time, however, she has a proposal for him.

A newly minted widow, Dorothy has been left alone to care for Crispin, a son she hardly knows. Desperate for help, she invites Evelyn to come to the country and act as the young boy’s tutor. But Evelyn will soon find that Crispin believes his father was murdered—and discovering the truth could break Evelyn’s heart all over again.

I received a review copy of this book from the publisher.

Review

Part mystery, part Greek tragedy, Death Mask will come as something of a surprise to readers familiar only with Ellis Peters’s “Brother Cadfael” mystery series. For one thing, Death Mask is a stand-alone mystery; for another, it’s very decidedly contemporary rather than historical. (Contemporary to Peters, that is. At a guess, the book takes place in the 1950s, and was originally published in 1959.) But it’s written with Peters’ customary skill and sensitivity to the shadings of human emotion and experience, and her distinctive voice is easily identifiable, though filtered (as it should be) through the first-person narrative.

Unlawful death, themes of justice and vengeance, and the lust for gold and glory contrast ominously with the surface normality of a English country house and the prickly relationships between an adolescent boy, his mother, and his tutor. The tension grows steadily as Evelyn, the narrator, begins to perceive the whole of what has happened, and the path which Crispin is pursuing with singleminded determination.  Peters captures that sense of looming and inevitable disaster that pervades Greek tragedy, letting it swell until it bursts forth in a surprising, violent, and dramatically drawn-out climax.

Evelyn’s growing affection for Crispin despite the latter’s impersonal antagonism, and Crispin’s reluctant respect for Evelyn in return, are what really make the story work for me. Without that, and without Evelyn’s insight into Crispin, interpreting him for the reader, the plot could feel overdone. But Peters paints both man and boy — the two main characters, and never mind the hint of romance between Evelyn and Crispin’s mother, Dorothy — with such subtlety and understanding that they become real to me. That reality spills over onto the secondary characters and renders the less plausible parts of the plot completely believable.

I don’t want to give away the ending, but I will say that in a sense, the Greek tragedy continues to the end: hubris brings down a prideful character. Who, and how, I leave you to find out. But I’ll also remind you that this is an Ellis Peters mystery, not one of Sophocles’ plays. Which means you have a reasonable hope for a satisfying conclusion.

Full disclosure here: I’ve actually read Death Mask twice before… which tells you something about how much I enjoy it! I hope you will enjoy it, too.

four-half-stars

About Ellis Peters

Edith Mary Pargeter, OBE, BEM (1913–1995) was a prolific author who worked in in many genres, especially history and historical fiction. She was also honoured for her translations of Czech classics. Pargeter is best known for her murder mysteries, both historical and modern. Born in the village of Horsehay (Shropshire, England), she had Welsh ancestry, and many of her works are set in Wales and its borderlands.

During World War II, she worked in an administrative role in the Women’s Royal Naval Service, and received the British Empire Medal – BEM.

Pargeter wrote under a number of pseudonyms; it was under the name Ellis Peters that she wrote the highly popular series of Brother Cadfael medieval mysteries, many of which were made into films for television. Most of her contemporary mysteries feature Inspector George Felse, his wife Bunty and/or their son Dominic.

Reading this book contributed to these challenges:

  • Cruisin' Thru the Cozies 2016

4 Responses to “Death Mask (Ellis Peters)”

  1. Katherine @ I Wish I Lived in a Library

    I almost requested this one and I’m so disappointed I didn’t as it sounds fantastic. I’m not sure I’ve read any Ellis Peters before but I definitely want too and this sounds like a good place to start.

    Open Road has been tempting me lately with their NetGalley releases. They had 2 Patricia Wentworths and I was so tempted but I already own both of them so there’s no real reason for me to request them but I so want too!
    Katherine @ I Wish I Lived in a Library recently posted…Brighton Belle – ReviewMy Profile

    • Lark_Bookwyrm

      I know — they’ve been publishing a lot of Ellis Peters books, and the Patricia Wentworths, as well as a few other British authors I’ve heard of but not read yet. I hadn’t read Death Mask in over a decade, and I didn’t own a copy, so I thought, “hey, here’s a chance to read it again!”

    • Lark_Bookwyrm

      Yes, it’s sometimes easier to try a new author with a standalone. And there are so many mysteries that are series, and so few standalones.