Friday 29 March 2024

The Missing Maid by Holly Hepburn

 

The Baker Street Mysteries

"Whatever she'd been expecting, it wasn't a bag full of letters to - well, to someone who didn't exist".

"It seemed detective work was considerably more difficult than the pen of Sir Arthur Conan Doyle suggested and, for the first time, Harry felt the magnitude of what she had undertaken".


The Missing Maid by Holly Hepburn is an intriguing and entertaining cosy mystery, set in London in the early 1930s. This Sherlock Holmes-inspired story is the first book in The Baker Street Mysteries series.

Blurb:

London, 1932.

When Harriet White rebuffs the advances of her boss at the Baker Street building society where she works, she finds herself demoted to a new position... a very unusual position. Deep in the postal department beneath the bank, she is tasked with working her way through a mountain of correspondence addressed to Baker Street's most famous resident: Mr Sherlock Holmes.

Seemingly undeterred by the fact that Sherlock Holmes doesn't exist, letter after letter arrives, beseeching him to help solve mysteries, and Harry diligently replies to each writer with the same response: Mr Holmes has retired from detective work and now lives in Sussex, keeping bees.

Until one entreaty catches her eye. It's from a village around five miles from Harry's family estate, about a young woman who went to London to work as a domestic, then disappeared soon afterwards in strange circumstances. Intrigued, Harry decides, just this once, to take matters into her own hands.

And so, the case of the missing maid is opened...


Harriet White aka Harry is introduced to us as a "woman of education and refined manners". She works at the Baker Street building society.

"She liked earning her own money... the granddaughter of a baron had no title to inherit and needed to make her own way in the world". Unlike many young ladies of her circles, she is not looking for marriage as means of supporting herself. Her mother insists on introducing Harry to suitable bachelors in hopes to see her married. 

"So her job, though frowned upon by her family, was more than just employment - it was a declaration of independence". 

When insufferable Mr Pemberton attacks her in his office, Harry doesn't hesitate to knee him in the groin. As he crumples to the floor, howling, Harry leaves the office and continues with her work as if nothing had happened. The next morning she finds herself reassigned to the post room.

And not just any post room. 

Harry's new job is to reply to the letters addressed to Mr Sherlock Holmes. 

"Every correspondent ardently believed not only that the great detective was a real, flesh-and-blood person, but also that he could and would solve their mysteries. The had each set pen to paper, some in frustration, others in desperation, all in hope and anticipation that Sherlcok Holmes would heed their cry for help".

Harry is signing the letters on behalf of the great detective as his secretary. 

She understands that her boss sent her here, "hoping she would refuse to lower herself to such ridicuousness, and she wasn't about to give him the satisfaction of being proved right".

Her replies are kind and soothing, telling the recipients that Mr Holmes has retired and doesn't reside at Baker St any longer.

As the weeks roll by, Harry is questioning her determination to stick things out. "And then, one Tuesday morning, she opened the envelope that changed everything".

Miss E. Longstaff has lost all hope that the police would help her family to find her missing sister, Mildred, who used to work as a domestic in London. She vanished without any trace, and her family is desperate for any news about her whereabouts.

Harry wants to help, seeking information about the missing girl, under the guise of Holmes.

And thus Harry's adventures begin, taking her from the high society drawing rooms to the slums of London. Hoping to unravel the mystery, Harry has to think what would Sherlock Holmes do to solve it.

There is a fascinating insight in the female gangs of shoplifters, known as The Forty Elephants. Their heyday was in the interwar period. By 1932 Alice Diamond, the female crime boss, was in prison, but the new members replaced old hands. 

The character of Harry is well-drawn and likeable. Conan Doyle would have approved of Sherlock Holmes' "secretary".


The Missing Maid is a cracking mystery, with a strong female protagonist, and deft plotting. It is a finely-balanced mix of historical detail and cosy crime fiction.


This review is part of the blog tour for The Missing Maid.

Many thanks to Holly Hepburn, Boldwood Books and Rachel's Random Resources for my e-copy of the book!


Chez Maximka, cosy crime



Purchase Link - https://mybook.to/missingmaidsocial

Author Bio –

Holly Hepburn has wanted to write books for as long she can remember but she was too scared to try. One day she decided to be brave and dipped a toe into the bubble bath of romantic fiction with her first novella, Cupidity, and she's never looked back. She often tries to be funny to be funny, except for when faced with traffic wardens and border control staff. Her favourite things are making people smile and Aidan Turner.

She's tried many jobs over the years, from barmaid to market researcher and she even had a brief flirtation with modelling. These days she is mostly found writing.

She lives near London with her grey tabby cat, Portia. They both have an unhealthy obsession with Marmite.

Social Media Links –  

https://twitter.com/HollyH_Author

Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/hollyh_author/

 

cozy mystery set in London


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