Thursday, November 06, 2014

The Impersonator by Mary Miley


First Line: I felt his eyes before I saw him.

Vaudeville actress Leah Randall is out of work and has no prospects, which is the only reason why she pays any attention to Oliver Beckett. Beckett's niece, Jessie Carr, disappeared seven years ago, and dear uncle has cooked up a clever little scheme. Leah is a dead ringer for Jessie. He wants Leah to go to the family home in Oregon, impersonate Jessie, and in six months after his niece's twenty-first birthday, split Jessie's $10 million inheritance with him. 

At first the gig is just a test of Leah's skill as an actress, but the more she gets to know Jessie's family, she realizes that someone killed Jessie. Leah's motive has changed from larceny to justice, but she'd better work fast. There's another person besides Uncle Oliver who knows Leah is an imposter: Jessie's killer.

I have long been an admirer of plots revolving around an impersonator-- like Josephine Tey's Brat Farrar-- so I looked forward to reading this book with a great deal of anticipation. I was not disappointed. Mary Miley has written an exceptional book filled with the history of vaudeville, the sights and sounds of the 1920s, and one very fascinating character in Leah Randall. 

As the novel begins, Leah is very much a product of her vaudeville upbringing: free from prejudice, fast off the mark with the latest slang or quip, quick at reading people and at thinking through the consequences of her actions... well, most of the time. Her jobless situation makes her desperate enough to underestimate the slimy Oliver Beckett. Desperation can do that to even the most honest of people. The Impersonator works because Leah is always such a believable and sympathetic character. She may have the lead role in "She Stoops to Con," but she remains truthful to herself about what she's doing.  

As Leah stays at the family compound in Oregon, she disappears more completely into her role as Jessie, and her speech and a few mannerisms begin to change. Her attitude towards some of the family members begins to change as well-- including how she feels about Jessie, whom Leah knows must be dead: 

"I had come to think of myself as her stand-in, her understudy, called up to take the part she couldn't finish. Jessie had crept under my skin. I cared for her. I wanted to know who had killed her. I wanted someone to pay for the crime." 

But there's a major impediment to Leah's finding Jessie's killer: she can't investigate her own murder. Part of the enjoyment in reading The Impersonator lies in watching Leah invent reasons to do things that will help her in proving the murderer's identity. You see, it's not that difficult to deduce who did it. The problem-- and the danger-- lies in proving it. 

I enjoyed this book from first page to last, and I look forward to reading more of Leah Randall's adventures. From working with vaudevillians the likes of Jack Benny and Milton Berle to impersonating an heiress. What next? Hollywood?
 

The Impersonator by Mary Miley
ISBN: 9781250028167
Minotaur Books © 2013
Hardcover, 368 pages

Historical Mystery, #1 Roaring Twenties mystery
Rating: A
Source: Purchased from Book Outlet


6 comments:

  1. Cathy - This really does sound like an interesting premise. And I do like the look at the era as well. I admit Miley is a new-to-me author; she probably won't be for long.

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    1. I have a feeling she won't be either, Margot. :-)

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  2. Cathy - Thanks for your review. "The Impersonator" sounds very good. I just checked Amazon - 110 readers agree with you giving it a 4.5 average rating. So I just bought it. A good start to the day! I note Miley has a second book out and the ratings so far are just as good. Ken in McLean, VA.

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    1. Yes, I'm looking forward to reading that book, Ken. I'm glad I could help you get your day started off well. :-)

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  3. This sounds like a great series, Cathy. I so enjoyed Brat Farrar and love this time period as it is when my grandparents were newlywed.

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    1. I love this time period, too, Debbie, but not because of any "ancestral influence." :-)

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