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Edited on Sat Apr-09-11 07:12 PM by Lydia Leftcoast
These mysteries take place in the fascinating cultural melting pot of pre-Civil War New Orleans.
The main character is a free black man, known as Benjamin Janvier in the Creole community and as Benjamin January to the "Americans" who have come in since the Louisiana Purchase.
Born slaves, the children of an African-born man and a half-white woman, he and his sister Olympe are freed when their mother is bought and freed to be the mistress of a white man. Their mother later has a daughter by this white man, Dominique, who herself becomes a mistress or placée.
Benjamin is clearly intellectual brilliant so his mother's patron sends him to school in France, where becomes a doctor and remains happy and relieved of the institutional racism of Louisiana until the death of his first wife leaves him heartbroken and unable to bear staying in Paris. He returns to Louisiana and ekes out a living as a musician, since black people are not allowed to practice medicine.
This is where the first book, A Free Man of Color, begins.
Although the mysteries are well-written in themselves, the real fascination is old New Orleans, where French, Spanish, African, and Anglo cultures mix and clash in unpredictable ways. It's a city where the French and Spanish regard the Anglos as filthy barbarians, where every prominent man has two families, one with his legal wife and one with his black mistress, where black people may be slaves or free, where there are names for every admixture of every kind of ancestry, where some of the free blacks own slaves, even though they themselves are vulnerable to being kidnapped and sold into slavery up river, where French is more commonly spoken than English, a city with with suffocating heat and humidity in the days before air conditioning.
Anyway, I was reminded of this series because my current "purse book" is the latest entry, Dead and Buried.
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