It rained over the weekend. It was a good time to read a stormy classic, but I chose not to roam the rainy heath with Thomasin Yeobright and the reddleman (The Return of the Native). Though usually fascinated by Heathcliff’s romps on the rainy moors and digging up of Catherine’s grave (Wuthering Heights), I am less so when it actually rains here. And Faulkner’s As I Lay Dying is too grotesque: Cash Bundren, do not ride your mother Addie’s coffin in a flooded river!
No, the classics are too life-like. And so I picked up a light mystery, Amanda Cross’s The Puzzled Heart.
Cross’s 14-book mystery series is set in academia. Her amateur sleuth, Kate Fansler, is a brilliant English professor, and her assistant D.A. boyfriend, Reed, helps her with cases. In later books, she and Reed are married, and he is a law professor. The witty dialogue between Kate and Reed puts me in mind of the repartee between Harriet Vane and Peter Wimsey in Dorothy Sayers’s books.
The Puzzled Heart, published in 1998, is surprisingly political. It is in part about the necessity for free speech at universities, and in part about the conflicts between the far right and the rest of us (liberals, moderates, etc).
At the beginning of the novel, Kate is deeply terrified and upset. Her husband Reed has been kidnapped by a far right-wing group, and they threaten to kill him if she tells the police. She is the real target: the ransom is to be her recantation of her feminist beliefs in an article to be published in a right-wing publication. Naturally, she will write the article–she will do anything–but she is terrified that they’ll kill him anyway. She confides in her best friend Leslie.
This is not the first threat she’s had, but she never thought it would affect Reed. Leslie wants to know, How many threats, and from whom?
“Several. I didn’t pay that much attention. Something called the League of Right-Wing Women wrote diatribes against everything I’ve worked for. They seemed to be in favor of sexual harassment, battering women, date rape, and child abuse. Perhaps that’s a bit strong. But they certainly don’t believe any of these things happen on a large scale, and saying they do is all a plot to harry men. Leslie, I just thought they were crackers. In addition, I thought they were probably sending these warnings to many women. I didn’t take it all that personally. The letter last night made it very personal.”
Kate hires another friend, Harriet, a private detective, to search for Reed. The investigation involves adopting a St. Bernard puppy, crashing a fraternity, dog-breeders, and a long look at the people in Kate’s life to identify any enemies. She does not think she has any enemies.
Yes, the far right is involved, but it is also personal. Who hates Kate? Is it someone in the department? Is it someone from her past?
Another stunning academic mystery! Very fast-paced, very well-written.
Amanda Cross is the pseudonym of Carolyn G. Heilbrun (1926-2003) , the feminist critic best known for Writing a Woman’s Life and The Last Gift of Time: Life Beyond Sixty. She was the first tenured woman in the English department at Columbia University, and a pioneering scholar of Virginia Woolf. She wrote mysteries under a pseudonym to protect her academic career.