An Ordinary Sort of Evil (A Rip Through Time Novel), by Kelley Armstrong (St Martins)
I love time-travel stories, especially those with a hint (or
more!) of mystery and romance. Kelley Armstrong’s “A Rip Through Time” series
checks all the boxes. In addition, she has a gift for bringing the reader into
the story without needing to read all the previous volumes. The setup takes Mallory
Mitchell, a 21st Century homicide detective, into Victorian
Scotland. The catch is that she doesn’t travel in her own (fit, martial-arts
trained) body, she gets stuffed into that of a buxom housemaid, an outrageous
flirt with ties to the criminal underground. In the early episodes, Mallory reveals
her identity and forms alliances with the housemaid’s employer, forensic-science
pioneer/undertaker Dr. Duncan Gray and Detective Hugh McCreadie, with the three
working murder cases together.
Now Duncan and Mallory are summoned urgently to the home of Lady Adler,
where they find a séance instead of a death in the household. The spirit identifies
herself as Lady Adler’s missing maid and pleads that Duncan find her killer.
How much is a hoax, and has a real crime been committed? One plot twist leads
to another, against the background of a simmering romance between Mallory and
Duncan. Drenched in historical detail, well-portrayed characters, and nuanced
relationships-across-centuries, the book kept me enthralled until the final
revelation—and eager to read the next chapter in the love story.



