Vicki Lane captures
the atmosphere and history of remote mountain areas in her mystery series
featuring amateur sleuth, Elizabeth Goodweather. The review below, first
printed in Our State magazine, features her book, Under the Skin.
**
One quote that precedes Vicki Lane’s latest novel suggests
the book’s subtle theme: “A Sister can be seen as someone who is both ourselves
and very much not ourselves — a special kind of double,” Toni Morrison says.
The two sisters who shape this story couldn’t be more different.
Elizabeth Goodweather is a sensible, hard-working woman who operates an herb
business from her Appalachian farm. By contrast, her sister, Gloria, is a city
girl, a “ditz in high heels, a poster child for conspicuous consumption.”
Claiming that her husband (her fourth) wants to murder
her, Gloria flees her Florida home and charges into Elizabeth’s life seeking
sanctuary. The timing couldn’t be worse. Elizabeth is balancing the demands of
her farm with those of her upcoming wedding to Phillip Hawkins. And even under
the best circumstances, she and Gloria have a prickly relationship.
Gloria swans around the Appalachian farmhouse in full
makeup and negligee, complaining about the “primitive” conditions (no
dishwasher or cable TV). Acknowledging that Gloria brings out her “whiny inner
child,” Elizabeth grits her teeth and tries to sympathize with her sister, but
she wonders if the murder plot is just a way to gain attention. Meanwhile,
Elizabeth wrestles with her nagging doubts about Phillip’s past and his connection
to her late husband.
Overall, the question is whether people are who they seem
to be. The answer unspools in surprising ways. Gloria reveals unpredictable
virtues of generosity and courage, and Elizabeth discovers her own inner
sybarite. A parallel story, set in the late 1880s, tells of two other sisters
who produce séances to fleece innocent people in the mountain resort of Hot
Springs. The two story lines intersect when the modern-day sisters attend a
seminar at that same resort.
Lane’s brisk narrative draws the reader along, and she
provides vivid details of mountain farm life. (Lane lives and works on her own
small farm in Madison County.) Best of all, her character development gives
rich layering to this tale of different sisters — who are, in the end, sisters
under the skin.
-- Katie Baer
“Our State Magazine,
December 2012, reprinted with permission”
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