Due to technical problems, on my end, not on Rosemary Kaye’s, I’ll have to postpone the additional posts from the Edinburgh International Book Festival. Once I’m back online, I”ll get things figured out. As of today, I won’t have Internet again until sometime on September 20. But, I have some reviews, and today, Kevin Tipple has one. Thank you, again, Kevin!

It is late January of 1960 as Styx & Stone: An Ellie Stone Mystery begins and Ellie Stone gets
some bad news from the local sheriff. Her father was found unconscious in his New York City
apartment and is now in the hospital in critical condition. Eleonora “Ellie” Stone, a reporter and
the only living child of Professor Abraham Stone, is going to have to take some time off from
her job in New Holland and go back home to see about her dad. Their relationship is not a good
one as they are estranged and now she is faced with dealing with their past issues as well as the
current crisis.
Upon arrival she soon learns that it was not a stroke or a heart attack that put her father in the
hospital. He was violently assaulted and his home office and library was ransacked. This
occurred just days after her brother’s grave was severely vandalized. While the police believe the
events are not related and the assault on her father, a renowned Dante scholar and esteemed
professor, was nothing more than a random burglary, Ellie has her doubts. Especially since
another professor, well known to her father and a colleague, died in somewhat mystery
circumstances in close proximity time wise to the assault on her father.
That fact, what happened to her brother’s grave, the very specific damage in her father’s
apartment, and more makes Ellie question the police investigation from the start. Ellie considers
herself a “modern woman” and has no problem with asking questions and pushing for answers
when she isn’t thinking about the past or enjoying the pleasures of the present. She drinks, she
smokes, she likes a good time with a man who strikes her fancy, and Ellie won’t put up with
nonsense from others.
Styx & Stone: An Ellie Stone Mystery is the start of a series and a good one. While all the
characters are complicated in this tale to some degree (no cookie cutter cardboard cutouts need
apply), Ellie Stone is exceedingly complicated. There is depth and nuance to this character that is
rarely found in the first novel of a series. She also has a subtle sarcastic streak that appealed very
much to this reader.
While historical mysteries are not my usual reading material, I thoroughly enjoyed Styx &
Stone:
An Ellie Stone Mystery. A complicated tale with characters of depth and nuance, the
mystery itself was a difficult one to solve kept this reader engaged, and the read was flat out very
entertaining on all levels. Styx & Stone: An Ellie Stone Mystery was a very good book and is
strongly recommended.

Material supplied by the good folks of the Dallas Public Library System.

Kevin R. Tipple ©2018, 2023