The Locked Room by Elly Griffiths (2022), 368 pages
I love this series. I love the characters
and I love the cozy mysteries that take place in coastal Norfolk, England. If
you are new to the series (which has been around since 2019), it follows
forensic archeologist Ruth Galloway and the interesting cast of characters that
live in the fictional town of King's Lynn. Sadly, this is the penultimate book
in the series and I am not sure what I will do when it ends. Probably start a
campaign for Griffiths to re-start it, maybe do a time-jump and have Kate, Ruth's
daughter, be the new focus. I am flexible on this.
A huge bonus to having a forensic archeologist as the protagonist is that you get to learn a lot of interesting history about very early England. The novel includes old castles and locked rooms, but is set during the Covid pandemic. It is a pet-peeve of mine when authors completely ignore the pandemic while setting a book right in the middle of it. I appreciate Griffiths for tackling it head-on. As usual, the mystery is fine, but what I really appreciate is how Griffiths moves the character's lives forward. When we first met Ruth in 2019, she was a late thirty-something. Now she is in her early fifties with a child. Her friends and friendships have also come and gone, but the core group has matured and grown. It feels like we have been on a journey together and I will miss it. If there is a downside to the novel, it is the revelation of a trope that is just unnecessary.
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