Melodie Johnson Howe
Author of The Mother Shadow
About the Author
Image credit: Melodie Johnson Howe
Series
Works by Melodie Johnson Howe
Another Tented Evening 2 copies
Schattenfrau 1 copy
Associated Works
Malice Domestic 10: : An Anthology of Original Traditional Mystery Stories (2001) — Contributor — 35 copies, 1 review
Tagged
Common Knowledge
- Gender
- female
- Education
- Stephens College
University of Southern California - Occupations
- actor
author - Nationality
- USA
- Birthplace
- California, USA
- Associated Place (for map)
- California, USA
Members
Reviews
The Mother Shadow – Brilliant Crime Novella
The Mother Shadow by Melodie Johnson Howe is a wonderful crime novella that introduces us to the female private detective Claire Conrad and Maggie Hill who becomes her assistant. What I like about this novella is that Melodie Johnson How has a writing style that reminds me of the doyen of crime writers Agatha Christie. There are no wasted words or padding, short sweet and straight to the point and the imagery given is so clear. Claire Conrad is a show more mixture of Miss Marple and Hercule Poroit with more money a couple of servants living in the cottage of a closed hotel.
Maggie Hill is working as a temporary secretary for Ellis Kennilworth at the home he shares with his mother, brother and sister. Maggie has been asked to report an hour earlier and duly turns up to find that Ellis is meeting with an ambulance chasing seedy lawyer. Maggie is required to type up a codicil to his will giving his coin collection worth over $4million to Claire Conrad for services yet to be rendered. Later that day Ellis kills himself then the mystery and twists kick in.
Maggie finds that the codicil is missing; her apartment has been turned over in burglary in search for the codicil and the suicide letter which also has gone missing. It is when Maggie goes to meet Claire Conrad to advise her of the missing codicil things start to get interesting. In the course of the investigation we uncover incest, blackmail, murder and financial double dealing and the hidden love child.
Throughout this thriller the shadow of Eleanor Kennilworth looms large over the story and how she is not only the head of the household but has what seems like unseen powers. It is only when her family is threatened that she reacts and when she does it is devastating. Eleanor Kennilworth is a ball breaking no nonsense matriarch whose will must be observed at all times.
The Mother Shadow is an excellent introduction to Melodie Johnson Howe’s work and her upright and correct private detective Claire Conrad and leads to more Conrad-Hill mysteries which I look forward to reading. This is sleuth writing at its finest and deserves a wider audience. show less
The Mother Shadow by Melodie Johnson Howe is a wonderful crime novella that introduces us to the female private detective Claire Conrad and Maggie Hill who becomes her assistant. What I like about this novella is that Melodie Johnson How has a writing style that reminds me of the doyen of crime writers Agatha Christie. There are no wasted words or padding, short sweet and straight to the point and the imagery given is so clear. Claire Conrad is a show more mixture of Miss Marple and Hercule Poroit with more money a couple of servants living in the cottage of a closed hotel.
Maggie Hill is working as a temporary secretary for Ellis Kennilworth at the home he shares with his mother, brother and sister. Maggie has been asked to report an hour earlier and duly turns up to find that Ellis is meeting with an ambulance chasing seedy lawyer. Maggie is required to type up a codicil to his will giving his coin collection worth over $4million to Claire Conrad for services yet to be rendered. Later that day Ellis kills himself then the mystery and twists kick in.
Maggie finds that the codicil is missing; her apartment has been turned over in burglary in search for the codicil and the suicide letter which also has gone missing. It is when Maggie goes to meet Claire Conrad to advise her of the missing codicil things start to get interesting. In the course of the investigation we uncover incest, blackmail, murder and financial double dealing and the hidden love child.
Throughout this thriller the shadow of Eleanor Kennilworth looms large over the story and how she is not only the head of the household but has what seems like unseen powers. It is only when her family is threatened that she reacts and when she does it is devastating. Eleanor Kennilworth is a ball breaking no nonsense matriarch whose will must be observed at all times.
The Mother Shadow is an excellent introduction to Melodie Johnson Howe’s work and her upright and correct private detective Claire Conrad and leads to more Conrad-Hill mysteries which I look forward to reading. This is sleuth writing at its finest and deserves a wider audience. show less
Like a sophisticated Hollywood drama, City of Mirrors exudes atmosphere and style. It’s hard for a 40-something actress to find work in Hollywood, but determinedly blond Diana Poole needs the money and acting is all she knows how to do. She recently buried both her mother, a famous actress and shrewd woman but not a great role model, and her husband, a fellow actor she had given up her own acting career for. Their ghosts continue to haunt her, and though Diana has managed to land a part in show more a movie, making a film is a collaborative effort and certain people on the set are insuring that progress is difficult. Then murder upends everything, putting her career, her friends, and her life in jeopardy. Everyone involved is keeping secrets, but Diana uses skills she developed as an actress to assess the players in this tragedy like they are characters in a script.
I was thrilled to discover City of Mirrors because I’ve been waiting for a new novel from Melodie Johnson Howe since the mid-1990’s. She’s acted in films herself and she knows how to set a scene, reveal character, and build suspense. Howe has also written Shooting Hollywood, a moody and entertaining book of short stories featuring Diana Poole, and her books from the 1990’s, The Mother Shadow and Beauty Dies, remain among my favorite mysteries.
Besides having a great story, the jacket design shimmers with eerie beauty and those who love attractive, evocative covers would enjoy having City of Mirrors on their shelves. show less
I was thrilled to discover City of Mirrors because I’ve been waiting for a new novel from Melodie Johnson Howe since the mid-1990’s. She’s acted in films herself and she knows how to set a scene, reveal character, and build suspense. Howe has also written Shooting Hollywood, a moody and entertaining book of short stories featuring Diana Poole, and her books from the 1990’s, The Mother Shadow and Beauty Dies, remain among my favorite mysteries.
Besides having a great story, the jacket design shimmers with eerie beauty and those who love attractive, evocative covers would enjoy having City of Mirrors on their shelves. show less
I was engrossed by the plot, and couldn't put it down but once it was over, I found it pretty forgettable.
It was interesting to have the main character be a middle-aged actress trying to make her comeback after decades not working. But I always felt somewhat removed from her and what she was feeling. I'm not sure if that was because of the writing, or because I just never clicked with Diana (or any of the characters, really).
The plot itself could have come out of an episode of Castle. A show more young starlet is murdered and Diana happens to find the body, and then tries and figures out what is happening. There's blackmail, and more murder, and kidnapping, prostitution, etc. etc. It's like crime bingo.
All the characters seemed to be stereotypes and none of them felt genuine. I can't decide if that was sloppy writing, or a deliberate dig at Hollywood.
All in all, a good way to pass the time. I might read the next book if it ever comes out, or I may not. show less
It was interesting to have the main character be a middle-aged actress trying to make her comeback after decades not working. But I always felt somewhat removed from her and what she was feeling. I'm not sure if that was because of the writing, or because I just never clicked with Diana (or any of the characters, really).
The plot itself could have come out of an episode of Castle. A show more young starlet is murdered and Diana happens to find the body, and then tries and figures out what is happening. There's blackmail, and more murder, and kidnapping, prostitution, etc. etc. It's like crime bingo.
All the characters seemed to be stereotypes and none of them felt genuine. I can't decide if that was sloppy writing, or a deliberate dig at Hollywood.
All in all, a good way to pass the time. I might read the next book if it ever comes out, or I may not. show less
I thought it was very good, and I'm disappointed that this obvious attempt at a female "buddy" series appears never to have taken off. It's openly a knockoff of Nero Wolfe and Archie Goodwin, which may have led to its demise. To its credit, the narrator is brassy and realistic, and the plot is complex and well thought out, but Claire Conrad, the Nero Wolfe character, is bizarre enough to not feel cuddly like Wolfe, and the few hints that we get of her character development don't really do show more much for us. The pair are accompanied by a James Bond-ish type, Ms. Conrad's butler, but it's never adequately explained why he buttles rather than earns millions of dollars as a hit man or something.
The plot revolves around an enjoyably eccentric and messed-up family of old money that is down on its luck, which presented some nice characters as well as some that really made me itch. I'll be looking for other books by this author. show less
The plot revolves around an enjoyably eccentric and messed-up family of old money that is down on its luck, which presented some nice characters as well as some that really made me itch. I'll be looking for other books by this author. show less
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Statistics
- Works
- 8
- Also by
- 4
- Members
- 156
- Popularity
- #134,404
- Rating
- 3.9
- Reviews
- 6
- ISBNs
- 27
- Languages
- 1







