The Devil in Oxford
A Ruby Vaughn Mystery
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- USD 14.99
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- USD 14.99
Publisher Description
Set after the Great War, Jess Armstrong’s USA Today bestselling and award-winning series is historical gothic murder mystery at its best, and Ruby Vaughn returns in The Devil in Oxford.
If someone were to ask American heiress Ruby Vaughn how exactly the occult came to play such a large role in her life, she would immediately point to her octogenarian housemate and employer, Mr. Owen. Together, the pair run a rare book shop in Exeter. Mr. Owen’s penchant for arcane, unusual—and occasionally illegal—books has been known to get Ruby into her fair share of trouble. And after the last year, she is looking forward to spending a quiet holiday in picturesque Oxford while Mr. Owen attends the annual meeting of his antiquarian society. Secretly, Ruby is also looking for a holiday from her confounding feelings for Ruan Kivell, the intriguing folk healer Pellar that she met in Cornwall.
When Mr. Owen secures two tickets to an upcoming exhibition of artifacts amassed by disgraced scholar Julius Harker, Ruby reluctantly agrees to attend. The evening turns out to be more eventful than either of them bargained for. Harker’s dead body is discovered amongst the collection, his business partner is hastily arrested, and Ruan arrives…wanting to speak with Ruby. It seems both the arcane and her Pellar have followed Ruby to Oxford.
The murder case is suspicious at best, but the last thing Ruby wants is another investigation. That is, until an old friend comes begging for Ruby’s help. It soon becomes painfully clear that there is more going on in Oxford than meets the eye. Ruby and Ruan will have to uncover the dark secrets of the competitive world of antiquities while trying to understand the peculiar force that keeps drawing them back together.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
Armstrong crafts a serpentine third historical mystery (after The Secret of the Three Fates) featuring 30-year-old Ruby Vaughn. When Ruby isn't sleuthing, she lives and works alongside her octogenarian employer, Mr. Owen, at their Exeter bookshop. On the week before Christmas in 1923, Mr. Owen suggests the pair spend the holiday in Oxford, where they can attend the annual meeting of an antiquarian society he belongs to. The group is abuzz about a "cache of Egyptian antiquities stolen by Napoleon himself" that the society is preparing to exhibit. Ruby agrees to come along, but the ceremony takes a horrific turn when the body of a disgraced Oxford professor is found crammed into the stone box that is supposed to house the Egyptian antiquities. Ruby jumps on the case, plunging into a convoluted web of drug trafficking and murder that never quite comes into focus. Armstrong lays the red herrings and potential suspects on thick, and while it's often entertaining to follow Ruby as she ping-pongs from clue to clue, readers will find themselves wishing for a bit more substance to the plot and Ruby's characterization. Fans of Armstrong's previous outings may have fun, but this is unlikely to win her new ones.