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  • Wet Grave

  • The Benjamin January Mysteries, Book 6
  • Written by: Barbara Hambly
  • Narrated by: Ron Butler
  • Length: 10 hrs and 56 mins
  • 4.3 out of 5 stars (3 ratings)

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Wet Grave

Written by: Barbara Hambly
Narrated by: Ron Butler
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Publisher's Summary

In such stunning novels of crime and character as Die upon a Kiss, Sold Down the River, and A Free Man of Color, Benjamin January tracked down killers through the sensuous, atmospheric, dangerously beautiful world of Old New Orleans. Now, in this new novel by best-selling author Barbara Hambly, he follows a trail of murder from illicit back alleys to glittering mansions to a dark place where the oldest and deadliest secrets lie buried....

It’s 1835, and the relentless glare of the late July sun has slowed New Orleans to a standstill. When Hesione LeGros - once a corsair’s jeweled mistress, now a raddled hag - is found slashed to death in a shanty on the fringe of New Orleans’ most lawless quarter, there are few to care. But one of them is Benjamin January, musician and teacher. He well recalls her blazing ebony beauty when she appeared, exquisitely gowned and handy with a stiletto, at a demimonde banquet years ago.

Who would want to kill this woman now - Hessy, they said, would turn a trick for a bottle of rum - had some quarrelsome “customer” decided to do away with her? Or could it be one of the sexual predators who roamed the dark and seedy streets? Or - as Benjamin comes to suspect - was her killer someone she knew, someone whose careful search of her shack suggests a cold-blooded crime? Someone whose boot left a chillingly distinctive print....

His inquiries at taverns, markets, and slave dances reveal little about “Hellfire Hessy” since her glory days in Barataria Bay, once the lair of gentlemen pirates. Then the murder is swept from his mind by the delivery of a crate filled with contraband rifles - and yet another telltale boot print left by its claimant. When a murder swiftly follows, Ben and Rose Vitrac, the woman he loves, fear the workings of a serpentine mind and a treacherous plot: one only they can hope to thwart in time.

All too soon they are fugitives of color in the stormy bayous and marshes of slave-stealer country, headed for smugglers’ haunts and sinister plantations, where one false step could be their last toward a...wet grave.

©2002 Barbara Hambly (P)2021 Blackstone Publishing

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good

Barbara Hambly saves my work day, again. Audible just released this one, and I smashed that "use a credit" button so fast.
Probably not the best of the series, but still good. Here we find January trying to solve the murder of a youth who was like a son to him. January is deeply effected and finds himself unusually angry and disaffected.The only thing is, this is the first we've heard of the character. It didn't have the emotional impact that it might have if it didn't feel like it came out of nowhere.
That said, it was nice to have some forward movement in January's relationship with Rose, and in his sister's personal life (I'm honestly more interested in what happens to Dominique and her child and her useless but well-meaning protector...). I also found the leprosy side plot extremely interesting.

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