Scandal in Babylon

Barbara Hambly

Book - 2021

"1924. After six months in Hollywood, young British widow Emma Blackstone has come to love her new employer, glamourous movie-star Kitty Flint--even if her late husband's sister is one of the worst actresses she's ever seen. Looking after Kitty and her three adorable Pekinese dogs isn't work academically-minded Emma dreamed of, but Kitty rescued her when she was all alone in the world. Now, the worst thing she has to worry about is the shocking historical inaccuracies of the films Kitty stars in. Until, that is, Rex Festraw--Kitty's first husband, to whom she may or may not still be married--turns up dead in her dressing room, a threatening letter seemingly from Kitty in his pocket. Emma's certain her flighty b...ut kind-hearted sister-in-law has been framed. But who by? And why? From spiteful rivals to jealous boyfriends, the suspects are numerous. But as Emma investigates, she begins to untangle a deadly plot--and there's something Kitty's not telling her..." --

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Review by Booklist Review

Hollywood, 1924. Emma Blackstone, recently widowed, has come from England to America to take a job as personal assistant to her late husband's sister, the famous and, according to Emma, spectacularly untalented movie star Kitty Flint. It's a comfortable job, and Emma comes to like Kitty very much. Then, after Kitty's ex-husband turns up dead in Kitty's home, and Kitty becomes a murder suspect, Emma is convinced her friend has been framed. This series-launcher from the author of the Benjamin January mysteries is thoroughly enjoyable. Hollywood in the 1920s is not exactly unexplored territory--you could build a small library devoted exclusively to novels set in this period--but Hambly makes the milieu feel, if not exactly new, then certainly fresh. Emma, too, feels fresh: not merely another flapper-era amateur sleuth, but rather a vibrant, intelligent woman with whom readers will enjoy spending time (a kind of American version of Phryne Fisher). If future Blackstone novels are as good as this one, Hambly could have another long-running series on her hands.

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

Set in 1924 Hollywood, this excellent series launch from Hambly (the Benjamin January series) introduces Emma Blackstone, a proper young English widow who's thrust into a world of decadent movie moguls, PIs, bootleggers, and their varied hangers-on. Emma's heart lies in classical archaeology, but after the death of her American soldier husband in the Great War, she faced a dreary penniless future in England as a paid companion. Emma's rescued by her sister, Kitty Flint, a sultry Hollywood sex goddess, who hires her to keep the gossip columnists at bay. When Kitty's unsavory first husband is found shot to death in her dressing room, Kitty becomes the prime suspect. Emma, though sorely tempted to take up her aunt's offer of a home in Oxford, turns ladylike private eye to prove Kitty's innocence. The lurid Hollywood backdrop, as reflected particularly in Kitty's steamy roles in the movie Temptress of Babylon and the upcoming Hot Potato, contrasts nicely with Emma's elegiac longing for her vanished world. This splendid romp is sure to win Hambly new fans. Agent: Frances Collin, Frances Collin Literary. (Sept.)

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Review by Kirkus Book Review

An educated British woman's work at a Tinseltown studio is exhilarating, exasperating, and dangerous. In a major departure from her 19th-century tales of freed Black man Benjamin January, including House of the Patriarch (2021), Hambly introduces a world of glamour and deceit. After losing her husband to World War I and her family to the Spanish flu, Emma Blackstone has been rescued from a soul-sucking job as a paid companion by her sister-in-law, Kitty Flint, better known as Hollywood starlet Camille de la Rose. Emma keeps Kitty's household going, cares for three beloved Pekingese, and rewrites scripts for Foremost Productions, whose studio chief is just one of Kitty's myriad lovers. Before she can join her aunt, who's written to say that she's returning to England from India, Emma must help Kitty by solving the murder of Rex Festraw, her not-quite-ex-husband. Rex showed up on set unexpectedly, and before Kitty even gets to meet with the man she married at 15, he's found dead in her dressing room, shot by her own gun. Asked for an alibi, Kitty claims to have been searching for one of her dogs, but Emma suspects that she was meeting a lover. The studio staff naturally spring into action to protect their star, and the corrupt police quickly release her, but the plot to frame Kitty, with several forged but incriminating death threats found with the body, imperils everyone around her until Emma and her love interest, cameraman Zal Rokatansky, can find the real killer. A sparkling series launch featuring Hollywood hijinks and a clever sleuth. Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.