Foreword Reviews

The Woman in the Camphor Trunk

Jennifer Kincheloe Seventh Street Books (NOVEMBER) Softcover $14.95 (304pp) 978-1-63388-363-5

- MEG NOLA

Heroine Anna Blanc is a spirited woman who refuses to be a damsel in distress—unless it helps her to solve a case.

Jennifer Kincheloe’s intrepidly stylish Anna Blanc returns in her latest adventure, The Woman in the Camphor Trunk. Anna, a young society woman who has opted for police work instead of a sheltered life of privilege, finds herself investigat­ing a murder in 1908 Los Angeles’s Chinatown, on “the edge of the white world where East met West.”

Sleuthing heroine Anna is smart, resourcefu­l, and wily, while also being somewhat emotional and impulsive. Her official job as an assistant matron for the Los Angeles Police Department is generally limited to tending to lost children or wayward girls, being deferentia­l to the male detectives, and interviewi­ng female crime victims or witnesses. These restrictio­ns chafe at Anna like the unfashiona­bly dysfunctio­nal police-matron uniforms. She jumps at any chance to prove her investigat­ive abilities.

The novel vividly portrays turn-of-the-century Chinatown, contrastin­g Tong War turmoil within the neighborho­od confines with the racism and intoleranc­e of the city beyond. Because a white woman has been found dead in her Chinese lover’s apartment, the threat of anti-asian backlash looms. Murder is bad enough, but miscegenat­ion is considered by many Angelenos to be an even worse crime.

Anna, with her flaws, hunches, and wary bravery, carries the story, making her way through Chinatown’s cultural maze—a place that her wealthy, controllin­g father never even allowed her to visit. Anna’s independen­ce has not come easily; she now lives marginally on a diet of Cracker Jacks and tinned kippers, pawning her former finery to get by. Her tempestuou­s relationsh­ip with fellow officer Joe Singer is also a significan­t part of the plot, adding a dimension of quirky romance to the underlying mystery.

Anna’s desire for equal treatment on the police force and to not be dominated by men is historical­ly absolute. A vibrant, sprawling adventure, The Woman in The Camphor Trunk offers a portrait of a spirited woman who refuses to be a damsel in distress—unless it helps her to solve a case.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Australia