Murder Takes a Vacation by Laura Lippman
published 2025
Post following on from a different Laura Lippman
book, Another Thing to Fall.
Laura
Lippman and Mrs Blossom and The Wire
Key character Mrs Blossom is a widow going on a trip to
Europe: she is also a part-time operative for Tess Monaghan, the PI who has long
been Lippman’s series character. Tess does feature in this book, but it is
definitely Mrs B on the frontline.
I did enjoy this book hugely, but I have a warning for
those who might read it like I did: I hated the first 50 pages or so, and felt
surprised that Lippman had produced them. They seemed to be sample chapters for
the worst kind of cozy mystery, with the cheery feisty Mrs B having her little
adventures and complaints and good times and difficulties. She meets a charming
man who sets all our alarm bells ringing and after predictable tourism
descriptions along the way, ends up in Paris with a dead friend and a mystery
to solve. So far so cliched.
But you have to have faith, because from here on in it got
much better, and I liked it a lot. Twisty plot and foreign places. There was
one real surprise for me, and one element of the solution that seemed so
glaringly obvious from early on that I wasn’t sure what the author's intentions were.
Mrs Blossom goes on
a river cruise on the Seine – a boat trip always a great setting for a crime
story (Christie’s
Death on the Nile an all-time favourite) because changes of
scene, varied people and lots of possibilities.
She pairs up with a splendid character called Danny, and it
is very hard to work out exactly who he is and what his intentions are. But –
we like this very much:
“I an excellent stylist and
all good stylists are busybodies. I ask my clients a thousand questions in
order to create the stories they want to tell.”
“Stories? Don’t you just pick
out clothes?”
For once, Danny looked to be
offended. “Clothes are narratives, our first chapters. Before we open our
mouths, we have told people a dozen things about ourselves. Let me take you
shopping tomorrow and prove to you I am who I say I am.”
Very Clothes in Books attitude.
Mrs B wore Allbirds shoes, as do I, though mine are
lace-ups:
He praised her new shoes,
orange Allbirds slip-ons. “Pretty,” he said, “yet perfect for walking these
uneven London streets.
Mrs Blossom is changing. Early on we had this:
Mrs. Blossom liked clothes and
had tended toward flowery prints even before her marriage to Harold Blossom.
They both enjoyed the silly joke of it, Mrs. Blossom arrayed in blossoms. And
since Harold’s death, her riotous dresses and blouses had felt like a
connection to him.
Now, surveying the profusion
of flowers and colors in her suitcase, she yearned for—what? Something
different? To be someone different?
Danny makes Mrs B buy a caftan:
But what a caftan. It had broad vertical stripes, a plunging V-neckline, and a slit almost to midthigh, but only on the left side, which somehow seemed classier than two slits. The sleeves were a solid plum color with bands of gold at the wrist.
When I looked at pictures of caftans (or kaftans – both correct) I found such beautiful items. I think I had thought of them quite dismissively – ‘coverups’ - until I started really looking. This one:
is from a fashion brand in India, and
I quite wanted to buy it.
Danny says:
“Your look is so Ann Taylor…. But “you should be dressing
like Elizabeth Taylor.” Yes indeed – she was queen of the caftan.
These are proper makeover scenes – something I love nearly
as much as a good mystery.
So all-in-all, an excellent book and I very much hope there
will be a series.
I found a very good review of the book on Amazon, which I recommend as helpful. The reader felt very much as I did, and she draws out many of the good things from the book.





Where can I find a real life Danny? He sounds great! I had never heard of Allbirds shoes, so am off to google them.
ReplyDeleteI agree; Danny sounds like a great character, Moira! It's interesting how Mrs. B. grows on a person after a while, and it sounds as though the story really did get better as it went on, which is great. Oh, and now I want a caftan...
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