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Summary
Summary
Featuring Toronto antiques dealer Lara McClintoch, Lyn Hamilton's fascinating series immerses readers in the world's most exotic cultures. This time, the globetrotting Lara travels to Easter Island, where ancient mysteries spawn modern-day murder as the giant stone carvings known as the Moai draw a delegation of experts to the island-and a killer with vengeance on his mind.
Author Notes
Lyn Hamilton was born on August 6, 1944. She attended the University of Toronto. She worked in communications in both the public and private sectors before publishing her first novel at the age of 50. She was director of the Cultural Programs Branch for the province of Ontario and director of public affairs for the Canadian Opera Company. She taught mystery writing for the School for Continuing Studies at the University of Toronto. Her first novel, The Xibalba Murders, was published in 1997. She wrote the Archaeological Mysteries series. The Celtic Riddle became a made-for-TV movie starring Angela Lansbury. She died of cancer on September 10, 2009 at the age of 65.
(Bowker Author Biography)
Reviews (3)
Publisher's Weekly Review
In Hamilton's well-told 10th archeological mystery (after 2004's The Magyar Venus), Toronto antiques dealer Lara McClintoch and her friend Moira Meller, while on vacation on Rapa Nui (better known as Easter Island), decide to register for the First Annual Rapa Nui Moai Congress, which they discover is being held at their hotel. Notable among the conference's participants an eccentric lot of interested amateurs rather than serious scholars is Jasper Robinson, an adventurer filming a documentary and putting forth his own theory about the Moai, the huge carved heads for which the isolated Pacific island is famous. Many are jealous of Robinson, but who would go so far as to murder the man? Vivid descriptions of the terrain, as well as details of the history and cultural evolution of Easter Island's people, enrich this chatty whodunit. While some of the action strains credulity, Hamilton makes effective use of flashbacks and puts a first-class twist on the traditional locked-room mystery. Agent, Bella Pomer. (Apr. 5) (c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Kirkus Review
Archaeologists, tourists, and murder victims converge on isolated Easter Island. When Lara McClintoch's best friend Moira comes out of surgery, she fashions a Life List of things to do before it's too late. Heading the list is a visit to Easter Island, 2,500 miles off the coast of Chile and site of hundreds of monolithic stone sculptures. Lara leaves her Toronto antique shop in the hands of her ex-husband Clive, who's romantically involved with Moira, and the ladies arrive on Rapa Nui just in time to crash the First Annual Rapa Nui Moai Congress. Conference participants are divided into those like Jasper Robinson who think the island was settled by South Americans and those like Gordon Fairweather who believe Polynesians settled it. On hand to record their mutual hostility are Kent Clarke and her film crew. First to die is Dave Maddox, then Jasper, then Seth Connelly. While cops flown in from Chile try to sort out the murders and find the missing rongorongo tablet Jasper flamboyantly presented at his final lecture, Lara e-mails clues to her boyfriend Rob, a Canadian Mountie, helps Gordon evade capture, and tries to discover why Gabriela, a pretty young hotel waitress, has fallen into a coma. Readers will be so mesmerized by Rapa Nui they'll probably add it to their own Life Lists. Hamilton (The Thai Amulet, 2003, etc.) makes an excellent tour guide, even if she packs too much baggage into her mystery. Copyright ©Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.
Booklist Review
Antiques dealer Lara McClintoch and her friend Moira Meller head to Rapa Nui (Easter Island) to celebrate Moira's return to health. When they reach their hotel, they find it's the site of the Rapa Nui Moai Congress--an academic conference to exchange information on the moai, giant stone carvings that populate the island. After the two join the conference, planning to attend the lectures and field trips, one of the attendees is found dead, thought by police to have been trampled by wild horses. Lara disagrees with the verdict and begins her own investigation as further participants die. Fascinating details about the island's history and the moai enhance this ninth adventure in the archaeologically rich series. Lara and Moira are well-drawn characters, but, disappointingly, the numerous secondary characters are hard to differentiate. Still this is an enjoyable addition to the series. Readers who enjoy the archaeology frame may also enjoy Aaron Elkins' forensic anthropology mysteries. --Sue O'Brien Copyright 2005 Booklist