About the book: The Doll from Dunedin
- Genre: Historical Mystery / Genealogy Mystery
- Publisher: Harbor Lane Books
- Pages: 428
- Publication Date: October 22, 2024
- Scroll down for Giveaway
The Doll from Dunedin is the sequel to the 2024 Readers’ Favorite Gold Medal winner in Fiction – Mystery – General, The Desk from Hoboken.
Still reeling from the dangers of a recent case, forensic genealogist RaeJean Hunter takes on a supposedly routine case to locate the missing heir of a woman she met in Central Park a year ago. Tantalized by a hefty income, she accepts.
But there’s a catch-she must find the heir within six months or the forty-million-dollar estate is donated to a local university.
With the tight deadline comes the chance of a sizeable bonus, a series of unforeseen obstacles, and the unexpected connection to a cold case from 1910, when perfume heiress Dorothy Arnold disappeared without a trace.
Armed with only her genealogical skills, the books and historical documents she unearths, and an antique doll that seems to be guiding her toward the answers she needs, RaeJean faces dangerous events that threaten to shatter her world and challenge her to meet the deadline. Her travels throughout the United States and New Zealand in search of answers bring with it its own question: Will she find the heir before time runs out?
But someone doesn’t want her to solve the case. The clock is ticking, and it will take every ounce of grit RaeJean has to solve this mystery and outwit the dangers that threaten her present while she sifts through the past.
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About the author: ML Condike
ML Condike’s novel, The Doll From Dunedin released October 22, 2024, is the second book in her genealogy mystery series. The first novel, The Desk From Hoboken (March 5, 2024), received a gold medal in the 2024 Readers Favorite, General Mystery category. Her stories blend facts with fiction, using historical records and current technology to solve century-old cold cases.
She’s published in seven anthologies including Granbury Writers’ Bloc (2019, 2022); Key West Writers Guild (2023); and SinC North Dallas (2022, 2023, 2024).
She’s a member of MWA, Florida Chapter, Sisters in Crime National, Sisters in Crime North Dallas, Granbury Writers’ Bloc, and Key West Writers Guild.
Connect with ML:
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Giveaway
My Thoughts
Reading this second book in ML Condike’s Genealogy Mystery series reminded me of the reasons I loved the first novel, The Desk from Hoboken, and yet, while familiarity with the initial novel is helpful, I felt that this book could easily stand on its own.
What I loved: Protagonist RaeJean Hunter is a character I really resonate with. She loves dogs and beautiful things. She finds solace in books and coffee and porch time. She has a good marriage with her husband Sam, one that has survived personal struggles, and when something attracts her attention, in this case the double mystery of finding the family who might inherit a recently-passed acquaintance’s estate and also solving the cold case of long-disappeared heiress Dorothy Arnold, she gives it her entire focus.
And did I mention there’s a creepy doll?
In this case the two cases are interwoven and while Dorothy Arnold is a real person, and Jill Hamilton is entirely fictional, Condike combines them well and the result is a compelling read that follows twists and turns, taking RaeJean to New York, Washington (the state), and New Zealand in her PN&J-fueled detective work.
Forensic genealogy was new to me when I read the first book, and I find the concept equally fascinating in the second, especially when we see our lead character using her skills to help sort out her own family history.
What I struggled with: Condike’s story is jam-packed with people, some of whom merely get a mention, but many of whom RaeJean actually talks to. The interconnections between friends, colleagues, family members, etc. can be challenging to keep straight, though the author tries to do so without pages of needless exposition. Rather, she shares what we need to know to follow the story. Still, there were times when I felt like I needed a “murder wall” with strings and thumbtacks (or, at least a whiteboard), just to remember who’s who.
What I’m looking forward to: Book three was hinted at in the final chapter. I hope it happens.
Overall: this is a well-paced novel that is mostly intellectual but still has some action sequences. There’s also some nice romance with RaeJean and Sam, though it fades to black before things get explicit, which is appropriate for this genre and intended audience.
Goes well with: peanut-butter and jelly sandwiches and coffee.
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