O' Artful Death, St. Martin's, $6.99, and Mansions of the Dead, St. Martin's Minotaur, $6.99, Sarah Stewart Taylor.
Unusually, Stewart Taylor's heroine, Sweeney St. George, makes a career as an art historian focusing on gravestones. This is such a perfect occupation for a mystery series heroine, I'm surprised no-one's thought of it before; however, like all novelists who bring real life interests to their work (Stewart Taylor is a graveyard afficionado herself), this focus brings more interest and depth to the story she's telling. In the first novel, O' Artful Death, Sweeney's friend Toby guides her to a highly unusual gravestone: a woman's body lying in a rowboat being piloted by death. The gravestone, as it happens, is in the graveyard of the artists' colony where his aunt and uncle live. He invites Sweeney along for Christmas, and the fun begins. When Sweeney makes a pre-visit phone call to the dead woman's relative to see if she can learn more about her - and this same woman ends up dead - the scene is set for an ominous and tension filled Christmas.
Stewart Taylor, who is apparently quite young, has the natural novelists' gift of setting a scene and creating memorable characters. The fictional "Byzantium Colony" where she sets her book is a loose collection of artists and writers who live in a sort of isolation on an almost "island" on the east coast. In existence since the 1880's or so, when the gravestone Sweeney is interested in was made, the same families are still living on the island, with all the shared knowledge, tolerance and lack of tolerance that a small community guarantees. Toby's aunt and uncle, Patch and Britta, and their three eccentric teenage children are worried about not only the death of the woman Sweeney had contacted by telephone, but also perplexed by a series of burglaries around the colony. Sweeney herself, while galvanized with interest about the grave of the mysterious long ago dead woman, is tormented by her friend Toby's burgeoning romantic relationship with one of the islanders, and mystified by a fellow visitor, a British antiques picker named Ian. None of this is as precious as it sounds as the psychological underpinning to all the characters is sound, and the characters are fully fleshed out. Stewart Taylor even supplies both a nifty red herring and a locked room conundrum; and perhaps niftiest of all, she solves the puzzle using her academic skills, a strength she shares with Joanne Dobson's heroine (who used an actual copy of Jane Eyre to good effect in her first novel).
Stewart Taylor also adds a cop in this book, and she gives the cop such a good backstory he becomes almost as compelling a character as Sweeney. There's definitely more to be told about him as well as about Sweeney. There's a good story here, and Sweeney again uses her academic smarts to not only help her solve the crime but to get herself believably involved in the murder investigation - the police need her specialized knowledge (who among us, after all, knows much, if anything, about Victorian mourning jewelry?). These books are fresh, interesting, and beautifully written, and I couldn't recommend them more highly.

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