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Caroline Roe

Author of Remedy for Treason

17+ Works 998 Members 25 Reviews 1 Favorited

About the Author

Image credit: Caroline Roe

Series

Works by Caroline Roe

Remedy for Treason (1998) 189 copies, 3 reviews
Cure for a Charlatan (1999) 134 copies, 1 review
An Antidote for Avarice (1999) 116 copies, 1 review
Consolation for an Exile (2004) 88 copies
A Potion for a Widow (2001) 87 copies, 1 review
A Draught for a Dead Man (2002) 82 copies
Solace for a Sinner (2000) 78 copies, 1 review
A Poultice for a Healer (2003) 71 copies
The Spider Bites (2010) 67 copies, 13 reviews
Murder in a Good Cause (1990) 23 copies
Short Cut to Santa Fe (1994) 15 copies, 1 review
Murder in Focus (1989) 13 copies
Pursued by Shadows (1992) 12 copies, 2 reviews
Murder on the Run (1985) 11 copies
Sleep of the Innocent (1991) 8 copies, 1 review

Associated Works

Christmas Stalkings (1991) — Contributor — 226 copies, 9 reviews
Malice Domestic 05: An Anthology of Original Traditional Mystery Stories (1996) — Contributor — 86 copies, 2 reviews

Tagged

Common Knowledge

Canonical name
Roe, Caroline
Legal name
Roe, Caroline Medora Sale
Other names
Sale, Medora
Birthdate
1937
Gender
female
Education
University of Toronto (PhD|Medieval Studies)
Occupations
teacher
novelist
Organizations
Crime Writers of Canada
Sisters in Crime
Relationships
Roe, Harry (husband)
Short biography
Caroline Medora Sale was born 1937 in Windsor, Ontario, Canada. She is married to Harry Roe, professor emeritus in the Center for Religious Studies of the University of Toronto. She obtained a doctorate in Medieval Studies at the Centre for Medieval Studies, University of Toronto. After completing her doctorate, Roe taught English at Branksome Hall, the private girls’ school in Toronto, and in 1979 began writing mysteries in the summers under the name Medora Sale. She won the Arthur Ellis Award for best first crime novel in 1986. In 1998 she published Remedy for Treason, the first of the Isaac of Girona paperback mysteries, starring a 14th-century Jewish doctor.
Nationality
Canada
Birthplace
Windsor, Ontario, Canada
Places of residence
Toronto, Ontario, Canada
Associated Place (for map)
Ontario, Canada

Members

Reviews

25 reviews
Although this mystery is set in New Mexico, it stars a Canadian team of sleuths, architectural photographer Harriet Jeffries and Toronto homicide cop John Sanders. Harriet has been in Kansas doing some photography and then she went to visit her friend Kate Grosvenor in Denver because Kate is recovering from a bullet wound received while she was in Lebanon working as a photojournalist. Kate talks Harriet into going to Taos, New Mexico because it is a special place to photograph. Harriet show more invites John to join her and then Kate invites herself along. However, since Harriet is going to Santa Fe to pick up John they drive separately. John got to Santa Fe by joining up with a charter that is bringing a tour group to New Mexico. Also with the group but not part of it are two eleven-year-olds(Caroline and Stuart) returning home for a weekend visit from school in Texas. The bus is supposed to drop the children off at the intersection near to the hotel their parents manage. However, Stuart dawdles when he gets off the plane and the bus leaves without them. Harriet and John determine that the bus is going to Taos as well and they decide to take the children and follow the bus. Except the bus follows a peculiar route to get to Taos and both the bus and Harriet's rented van end up on a deserted road which seems to go nowhere. When the bus abruptly crashes Harriet has to stop as well because there is no room to go around. The hour is late and it is hard to see. The four occupants of the van go to the bus and discover it is in the command of two armed men. One woman has already been shot and the armed men are threatening to kill the others if they don't give up the valuable cargo the armed men believe they carry. When the armed men disappear in the middle of the night and so do a few of the other guests, Harriet and John are left to try to go for help in a van that has the air let out of all the tires. Meanwhile Kate has called the police because Harriet and John have not shown up at the motel they agreed to meet at.

It seems that a number of the people in the tour group are not what they claim. As well, a notorious crime boss is somehow involved and dead bodies start showing up. Harriet, John and Kate are all in danger. There are a number of tense moments for them but in the end it works out well.

I really liked this team of detectives. As well, Kate joins up with a local cop and manages to overcome a bad drug habit. They look like they could become a sleuthing duo too.

I could have done with more local colour from New Mexico but that's not a serious drawback.
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½
This book was written over 30 years ago and, unfortunately, time hasn't done it any favours. It's not so much dated as improbable even at the time it was written. I couldn't get over a woman marrying the father of her child when he insisted she leave her behind for over a year. And there were other things that strained my credulity.

The book starts in England where a man has forged something for a buyer but before it can be picked up by the buyer two Canadians come to get the work. When the show more original buyer comes to pick up the work and finds it is gone, the forger is killed. Back in Canada Harriet Jeffries has received a letter from her former assistant who asks to stay with Harriet for a time. This is an unusual request because the assistant, Jane, had an affair with Harriet's lover, Guy Beaumont, and when Harriet discovered this she fired Jane. Jane had Beaumont's child but, when they left for Britain, he insisted she leave the child behind. Jane never does show up at Harriet's place but Guy does, demanding to know where Jane is because she took something valuable from him.Harriet denies knowing where Jane is (the truth) and Guy becomes violent. Fortunately, Harriet's present lover, Inspector John Sanders, shows up and takes care of Guy. When Guy's dead body shows up in Harriet's apartment a few days later it's obvious Sanders can't be involved in the murder investigation. Meanwhile, Jane has surfaced in upstate New York and again has asked Harriet for help. Harriet and Sanders drive down to where she is supposed to be staying but can't find her. Jane has turned to her sister for help putting her sister in harm's way. Harriet and Sanders return to Canada but keep investigating. They question Beaumont's art dealer several times but she denies having heard from Guy or Jane. Is anyone besides Harriet telling the truth? And what are they hiding? If you really need to know, read the book. show less
After a series of mysterious and unnatural deaths, and amid angry rumblings about witchcraft and sorcery, the physician Isaac tries to figure out what malice is at play in late fourteenth-century Girona. Pleasantly readable, if neither deep nor wildly compelling—in days gone by, I would have said this series would make for an excellent read on a plane. Remember travel?
I really enjoyed this book and I thought it was better written than Shortcut to Santa Fe. The author obviously has done a lot of research into this era and I learned a lot about life in Spain in 1354.

Although this series is called The Chronicles of Isaac of Girona in this particular book Isaac does not play a very large role. He was present when the murdered man, Pasqual Robert, arrives at the main gate of Girona with a knife stuck in his back. However, the main investigation into his show more murder is done by Oliver Climent, a friend of the deceased who travelled with him on the King's business. Another thread in the book has to do with the King's seige of Sardinia. The King's page, Yusuf, has been working with Isaac but questions have been raised about the appropriateness of an Arab living in the Jewish calle. So Yusuf travels to the King in Sardinia to get his permission to continue to live there. While he is in Sardinia he becomes aware of a plot to embitter the soldiers of the army so that the King will be forced to lift the siege. The solution of this sub-plot was somewhat ambiguous so I expect the next installment in this series will examine this problem again. However, the murder plot was resolved very nicely and there is even some happy romantic moments at the end.

There is a quote on the back from the Toronto Globe and Mail "Should go instantly to the top of any Cadfael-lover's list." and I would agree with that. I'll be looking for more of these books.
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Statistics

Works
17
Also by
2
Members
998
Popularity
#25,828
Rating
½ 3.6
Reviews
25
ISBNs
66
Languages
6
Favorited
1

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