Saturday, October 12, 2024

Betrayal at Ravenswick by Kelly Oliver (Fiona Figg Mystery Book One)

Publication Date:

March 10, 2020

Length:

 208 pages

Summary:

I jumped into this series out of order because I wanted to read the one set in Cairo. It was book three so when I finished it, I wanted to go back to see how the original plot and character development unfolded. This book one is part of a series with just the main character, Fiona Figg and later she is joined in the second series by her sidekick, Kitty. Covert in Cairo was the one I read as part of series two. 

Fiona Figg's cheating husband has forced her to strike out on her own. Set during World War I, she and her spouse have been apart and when she realizes he has taken up with another woman she decides to throw herself into the war effort as a spy for British Intelligence. She is asked to go undercover, posing as a male doctor, to Ravenswick Abbey estate, with the hopes of exposing a suspected traitor, one Fredrick Fredricks. When she finally meets the notorious South African hunter, she is not impressed and thinks he is full of himself and a first rate snob. Not sure whether he is an actual traitor on the side of the Germans though, she treads lightly, trying to keep up her disguise while befriending one of the ladies there, Mary, who takes a bit too much interest in Fiona, thinking of course, she is a man.


Juggling all the moving parts around her is difficult as she is in fear of being discovered and when the matriarch of Ravenswick is murdered she finds herself in the unique position of being able to investigate as a male doctor, giving her more access and perspective to the crime. Trying desperately to make sure her disguise isn't uncovered (and often hilariously forgetting to remove all the spirit gum holding her beard on when she dresses back as her female self) Fiona must convince her bosses at the intelligence office to let her sleuth just a bit longer. She also must decide: is Fredricks friend or foe?

My Thoughts:

I admit when I started this story I found it a little silly. And it is. But it grew on me. And now I am reading book two. It's funny, and Fiona has a sensitive side (not telling how because that requires spoilers and I try not to do that) as well as a sarcastic tone to her voice. I realize some of the things she is able to do are a bit 21st Century but I was willing to go with it a bit because this author added enough accurate history and social norms of the time to make it overall a believable story. Fiona being a help in the war effort is something some women did, and dressing as a man undercover isn't unheard of.

There are some touching moments with her unfaithful husband which humanize him, bone chilling stories about nerve gas used in WWI which I didn't realize the extent of, and a whole other set of interactions with men she she is trying to fend off that make the story one which will have more depth going into sequel books. I would like to read them all eventually and see how she acquires her sidekick, Kitty, in the second series. 

This is a fun cozy mystery with some serious moments but with the right mix of humor and mayhem. 


1 comment:

  1. I read this when it came out, I think, and when I went back to look at my review, what stood out was Fiona's bitterness. Yes, she was treated badly but the reader wants her to move on (although that is easier said than done, I recognize).

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