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Fiction Women Sleuths

The Scarlet Macaw

by (author) S.P. Hozy

Publisher
Dundurn Press
Initial publish date
May 2013
Category
Women Sleuths, Historical, Thrillers
  • Paperback / softback

    ISBN
    9781459705982
    Publish Date
    May 2013
    List Price
    $17.99
  • eBook

    ISBN
    9781459706002
    Publish Date
    May 2013
    List Price
    $6.99

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Description

A literary mystery where the people and the settings in the exotic East are paramount.

Two entwined mysteries unfold in two time periods in Singapore – one in the present and the other in the 1920s. Artist Maris Cousins has lived in Singapore for four years, but the sudden death of her mentor, gallery owner Peter Stone, causes her to stop painting and leave Singapore to reconnect with her family in Canada. There she becomes immersed in the fictional stories of love and betrayal from Singapore’s past – in first editions left to her by Stone – written by a famous early-20th-century author, E. Sutcliffe Moresby.
Drawn back to Singapore and the gallery, she searches for answers to the mystery of three people – a writer, his young wife, and their baby – who seem to be linked to Stone. But along the way, Maris becomes caught up in circumstances involving smuggling and possibly murder.

 

About the author

S.P. Hozy was born in Toronto, and after graduating from the University of Toronto with degrees in English Literature and Psychology, she spent two decades working in the Canadian film industry, winning several awards for sound editing. Her third novel, A Cold Season In Shanghai, was published by Rendezvous Press in the fall of 2009. She is currently working on her fourth, set in Singapore during two time periods, the 1920s and the present.

S.P. Hozy's profile page

Editorial Reviews

What elevates The Scarlet Macaw from most other mysteries is its fervent grasp of the power of stories, and how important they are in providing a sense of self.

National Post

Notable particularly for its vivid sense of place in modern Singapore.

Booklist

Hozy's third mystery is a magnificent combination of two stories a century apart. ...Hozy skillfully transports readers between the two centuries and builds suspense with questions of who can be trusted.

Publishers Weekly

Hozy’s luscious prose makes this literary stand-alone a memorable read. Her talent for juggling multiple narrators (alternating between the present and 1920s Singapore) and interspersing with clue-laden short stories is impressive. Leisurely paced, it has tremendous crossover potential for non-mystery readers who favor classic tales such as those of W. Somerset Maugham.

Library Journal

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