Deanna Raybourn | Killers of a Certain Age

L: Author portrait of Deanna Raybourn; C: Cover of Killers of a Certain Age; R: Bourbon Street, New Orleans

Killers of a Certain Age is sharp and breezy, dark humored and sometimes desperately funny.

It gives women their voice, their rage, and their utter competence.

Oh my, I do hope Deanna Raybourn had as much fun writing Killers of a Certain Age (2022) as I did reading it. Focused and witty, Raybourn is utterly in command from the sly, initial author’s note to the final moments and summary remark. Killers is an out-of-the-park home run of a read. [1]

 

THE STORY

As always, I am interested in the how and how well of a tale, not a specific running through of events. But an overview of the story is needed. This from Raybourn’s website:

“Older women often feel invisible, but sometimes that’s their secret weapon.

 

Billie, Mary Alice, Helen, and Natalie have worked for the Museum, an elite network of assassins, for forty years. Now their talents are considered old-school and no one appreciates what they have to offer in an age that relies more on technology than people skills.

 

When the foursome is sent on an all-expenses paid vacation to mark their retirement, they are targeted by one of their own. Only the Board, the top-level members of the Museum, can order the termination of field agents, and the women realize they’ve been marked for death.

 

Now to get out alive they have to turn against their own organization, relying on experience and each other to get the job done, knowing that working together is the secret to their survival. They’re about to teach the Board what it really means to be a woman—and a killer—of a certain age.

“It’s kill or be killed, but they’ve been at this a long time….” (from the cover)

I find thrillers stressful reading and usually avoid them. What drew me to Raybourn’s Killers was representation, pure and simple. (And that cover blurb that promised a witty telling!) I am of that same certain age and rarely do I find crime fiction about older women that isn’t of the cozy variety. Now I enjoy me a go-round with Ms. Marple as well as the next, but give her a fierce eye, strong friends of her own kind, and a reason for a little sex and serious revenge, well now, take my money!

Killers of a Certain Age is sharp and breezy, dark humored and sometimes desperately funny. It gives women their voice, their rage, and their utter competence.

 

CHARACTER, PLOT, & VOICE

I look for characters with heft. The main four women in Killers have solidity; initially a bit too 007 but their eventually revealed backstories flesh them out credibly. Secondary and even minor characters are sketched with sufficient verity. Raybourn tells you how people look with an easy swiftness. There seems to be a future tense cinematic awareness on her part but one can envision one’s own Billie, or Akiko, or Kevin by the way they move, their mannerisms, and the impact of their respective pasts.

The very real notion of what age does to a body, the female body in particular, is not shied away from. I can imagine that there are some who will find these “impossible old bitches” as Billie calls themselves at varous points implausible in terms of their ability to recover quickly enough from various injuries or overextension to save the day, themselves, or each other. That’s the grace of fiction and, in this case, Raybourn’s stylish speed and narrative flash. (Perhaps one can be inspired to higher levels of self care even if covert assassin is not our job title.)

The plot is patterned like a detailed tapestry, every move stitched, every knot tied just so. There is more than one moment that seems incredible, but the flow of the action sweeps you along with a complicit wink. Killers begs to be on the big screen (though I confess I dread that, fearing a glam casting and a male-gazing direction that would ruin all).

And the narrative voice burns with its focus. It is fierce though not always loud—in places it is almost gentle—but the telling is so en pointe, so confident, so almost joyous in its intent that as a reader you feel utterly held and challenged to keep up with the rush of considerable action.

A couple novels of crime & mystery, though utterly different in tone and style, have struck me with a comparable trifecta of well-balanced character, plot, and voice: Dorothy L. Sayers’ Gaudy Night (1935) and Ellis Peters’ Brother Cadfael’s Penance (1994). [2, 3] And a few have come near: Laurie King’s Touchstone (2008), Marco Carocari’s Blackout (2021), and Jill Paton Walsh’s A Presumption of Death (2002). [4, 5, 6] And, if I may dare to speak of a book I’ve only just begun, Fiona Erskine’s Phosphate Rocks (2021), looks to be shooting for a spot on my list of best crime books. [7]

Writing Hard, Writing Soft

What drives Killers is its vivid, urgent storytelling. I was with these women the entire way, gripped by the nape as it were, to see what they did, what they decided, and to be frank, how they killed and thought about killing, individually and collectively. This last, the very last—how the women thought about their “job”—while only intermittently mentioned was a bit tricky. Killers is meant to be an entertaining read not a discussion of ethics. In the end I think we want to believe we’d be as honorable.

The Sphinxes they’ve been named. Billie, the first person narrator of the present time chapters, is intellectual and ruthless, a natural leader. The remaining trio, Mary Alice, Helen, and Natalie, are less defined but they have their moments in terms of personality and the lethal precision of their respective skill sets. There are men, well-delineated and credible, one perhaps a tad idealized, but for the most part Raybourn keeps the focus on the women.

The Sphinxes are superb, meticulous planners but when things go awry—and we know they will—they are immediately inventive and cool under fire. And they trust and respect each other, not simply for their skills but for who they are and how they think and feel.

But there are grace notes to the story as well, moments of tenderness: when Cassandra Halliday, the women’s Museum mentor in their youth, confronts Billie and uses a painting to make her point; when one of the women recalls an old lover with sensual, tender intensity; when the notion of female solidarity is captured by the making sure hotel maids don’t have to clean up after their ‘work’ and the giving of a ginger drop by one of the old timers to a younger.

Writer as Exemplar

With any of the titles cited above I could imagine something different at certain points, usually having to do with a plot point or a certain aspect of a character. My tweaking in Killers would be only a matter of authorial style but it was a useful exercise to imagine how I might have approached a certain scene differently, useful to imagine why Raybourn made the choices she did.

I learned quite a bit from her re: terse visual description via point of view, practical sentence-to-sentence sequencing, and that notion of utterly trusting one’s reader to be a companion in the process. And while my own idiosyncrasy is to read simultaneously as reader and as writer, never did I feel Raybourn’s heavy hand as author. I like to think I heard her laughter though.

There is real work behind Killers’ blithe ferocity and it is truly impressive. They say the best actors are those who make it look easy, who don’t seem to be acting at all. If Killers of a Certain Age does make it to the cinema, Raybourn has given the cast gold to work with.

Author Bio

New York Times and USA Today bestselling novelist Deanna Raybourn is a 6th-generation Texan with a degree in English and history from UTSA. Her novels have been nominated for numerous awards including the Edgar, RT Reviewers’ Choice, the Agatha, two Dilys Winns, and the Last Laugh. She launched a Victorian mystery series featuring intrepid butterfly-hunter Veronica Speedwell in 2015. This Edgar-nominated series is ongoing. Her first contemporary thriller, Killers of a Certain Age, chronicles the adventures of four female assassins who must band together against the organization that would rather see them dead than let them retire.” (From the author’s Press Kit)

Raybourn on Mastodon, Instagram, and Twitter

 

If you have a question or comment for me, drop me a line via my Contact page.

© J.A. Jablonski 2022. All rights reserved.

 

ABOUT BOOK THOUGHTS

Book Thoughts is an intermittent column within my blog. The essays are both book reviews and book responses. I like to converse with and around the books I read.

How to cite this post

Jablonski, J.A. (2022, Dec 26). Deanna Raybourn|Killers of a Certain Age. Blog post. J.A. Jablonski (website).
https://jajablonski.com/2022/12/26/deanna-raybourn-killers


IMAGE CREDITS

Header image

    • Left: Author Portrait of Deanna Raybourn (From her Press Kit)
    • Center: Cover of Killers of a Certain Age (From Raybourn’s Press Kit)
    • Right:  Bourbon Street, New Orleans. Photo by David Reynolds on Unsplash

SOURCES

Disclaimer: As a Bookshop Affiliate (US only) I will earn a commission if you click through on a book title I’ve linked to and make a purchase.

[1] Raybourn, Deanna. (2022). Killers of a Certain AgeBerkley Books. For a complete listing of Raybourn’s’ books see her website.

[2] Sayers, Dorothy L. (1935). Gaudy Night. This link is to the 2012 Harper Paperbacks edition.

[3] Peters, Ellis. (1996). Brother Cadfael’s Penance. Mysterious Press.

[4] King, Laurie R. (2008). Touchstone. Bantam.

[5] Carocari, Marco. (2021). BlackoutLevel Best Books.

[6] Walsh, Jill Paton. (2002). A Presumption of Death. St. Martins.

[7] Erskine, Fiona. (2021). Phosphate Rocks. Sandstone Press.

 

KJ Charles | The Will Darling Adventures | Pt. 2

Covers of KJ Charles books showing Darling & Kim Secretan facing each other
The Will Darling Adventures by K.J. Charles [1]
Cover Art by Tiferet Design

 

For all that the Will Darling books are romance, they are not sweetness and light. People have pasts and they hurt as a result.

KJ Charles reports that writing the final book of The Will Darling Adventures trilogy (Subtle Blood) was especially difficult, describing the experience “like driving [a Land Rover] into a tar pit.” [2] As with many authors writing at that same time, the Covid pandemic laid her low. I, for one, am grateful she persevered. Reading Books 2 and 3 both comforted and kept me reasonably sane in the face of the virus’ impact in my own life.

Series description from Charles’ website:

A m/m romance trilogy in the spirit of Golden Age pulp fiction. It’s the 1920s and tensions are rising along with hemlines. Soldier-turned-bookseller Will Darling finds himself tangled up in spies and secret formulas, clubs and conspiracies, Bolsheviks, blackmail, and Bright Young Things. And dubious aristocrat Lord Arthur ‘Kim’ Secretan is right in the middle of it all: enigmatic, unreliable, and utterly irresistible.

The Sugared Game

The Sugared Game takes up a few months after the events of Slippery Creatures. Although a standalone story it is decidedly a sequel and needs the previous book to set the context. With the four key characters—Will Darling, Kim Secretan, Maisie Jones, and Phoebe Stephens-Prince—firmly established Charles is able to expand the action both in terms of romance and adventure.

KJ Charles characters Will Darling Kim Secretan Maisie Jones Phoebe Stephens-PrinceThe story opens with Will taking best friend Maisie to the High-Low Club for an evening on the town. The club is glamorous but seedy, clearly a haven for nefarious doings of all sorts. It becomes the focus of the plot and the continuously fractured romance between Will and Kim. While at the club Will meets a one-time military compatriot. Kim, who initially is as unreliable, and irresistible, makes use of Will’s connection, turning the bookseller’s finally neatened world into one more secretive, criminal, and underhanded. 

If Slippery Creatures was something of a romp, The Sugared Game is tougher, occasionally meaner, taking a deeper look at the gents as the taut plots winds into something more twisty and and dangerous for them both. Trust, the lack thereof that is, continues to center the emotional dynamics here.

Kim’s fiancée Phoebe and Will’s best friend Maisie have their own tale as Maisie, with Phoebe’s solid support, tries to establish herself with the fashion design set. Unlike the men, the women have a strong and growing friendship. Staying close to the historical reality of the times, the women struggle more to be taken seriously. Phoebe, a glamorous and wealthy aristocrat is viewed as ornamental; Phoebe’s lower class standing and race are held against her. Only Phobe’s patronage gives her the edge up, capable as Maisie is. Still, the women willingly use societal assumptions as an effective disguise that allows them to skirt those very expectations.

While I personally did not feel as engaged with the story—and that’s on me; the 1920s noir/pulp style just isn’t my thing—I very much liked how Charles’ lets Will and Kim mature, something she gently and effectively explores in a side story she sent her readers via her newsletter (“To Trust Man on His Oath” —see link at the end of this essay.) Will tends to think he has his act together; it’s Kim who has a problem. By the end of the tale, Will learns new things about himself and discovers, too, that Kim can in fact be be trusted

 

Subtle Blood

Book 3, the last of the trilogy, is a wonderfully blazing and hugely satisfying conclusion to the series. NPR’s Maya Rodale pronounced Subtle Blood a “sexy, elegant and romantic murder mystery” and it is every bit that. We leap right back into things with the murder of a man at a gentleman’s club, the suspected killer being the older brother of the charming and devious Lord Arthur “Kim” Secretan.

Kim and his friend and lover, Will Darling, the rough and tumble, capably murderous WWI soldier turned bookseller, set out to exonerate Kim’s brother despite the likelihood that he very much did the deed. At risk are Kim and Will’s practical and romantic futures. There is derring-do, political and social intrigue (historically accurate while providing fierce commentary on our modern time), and lots of energetic as well as tender, on-page sex. The plot is believable and strong though I found myself occasionally feeling a bit rushed.


A challenge in writing a series is how to maintain character consistency while permitting the character to change through the course of the action. Charles struggled with this (she talks about it here). There would be a Twitter comment here and there that suggested Kim’s development was not easy to work out or write out. At first I wasn’t sure if she’d pulled it off.

 


Will comes across as a well-grounded bloke and Kim a flip moneyed man-about-town in Book 1 (Slippery Creatures). In Book 2 (The Sugared Game) Kim needs to flit about to resolve the problem and Will anchors the doings, but neither seem to be entirely facing each other, or rather, seem unprepared to deal with doings outside of the plot, as it were. They haven’t dealt with each other.

“Yet I must thank you for admitting that you are thieves rather pretending that your work is in a respectable profession . . . Rascal thieves, Here’s gold. Go, suck the subtle blood o’ the grape, Till the high fever seethe your blood to froth, And so ’scape hanging. . . .”
~ Shakespeare. Timon of Athens, Act 4, Sc. 3

In Subtle Blood the ravens come home to roost. Kim must deal with his rather appalling family and his own need for at least one family member’s approval. Will finds that the pragmatic, just-endure-today approach that let him kill during the war killing without remorse, with pride even, does not work when it comes to love. Kim matures and finds his metier. Will follows but more slowly. And for once, it is Kim who leads here in self understanding and kindness for all that he still struggles with the pain of what he has to do and who he is.

Kim’s one-time fiancée, Phoebe Stephens-Prince, now Lady Waring, and Darling’s long-time good friend, Maisie Jones, who is a Paris designer now, play secondary but pivotal roles in this last tale. They are strong women and, while supportive of the gents, do not shrink from forcing Kim and Will (and, surprisingly, Kim’s father) to deal with the consequences of their actions and, in Will’s case, to grapple with the emotional realities of loving a man beyond one day at a time.

The series ends with Charles’ promised happily ever after (HEA) and, in theory, that’s that. But where Will and Kim end up suggests sequels might be possible. Personally, I’d go for a series with Phoebe & Maisie as the leads. How Charles handles Kim and Phoebe’s broken engagement and Maisie’s reinvented self and identity seemed to me a tad predictable but it does set them up for their own books.

 

For all that the Will Darling books are romance, they are not sweetness and light. People have pasts and they hurt as a result. There are difficult situations, death, and considerable mayhem. Charles considerately posts content warnings on her website here.

Finally, Charles did a rather lovely thing for her readers—wrote supplemental tales to this trilogy. Those signed up for her newsletter received them first, but since then she has posted the side stories on her website.

 

NOTE: This essay is an updated version reviews I originally published on my artist blog, Dante’s Wardrobe.

© J.A. Jablonski 2021. All rights reserved.

ABOUT BOOK THOUGHTS

“Book Thoughts” is an intermittent column within my blog. The essays are not so much book reviews as book responses. I like to converse with and around the books I read.

HOW TO CITE THIS POST

Jablonski, J.A. (2021, Aug 16). KJ Charles |The Will Darling Adventures | Pt. 2.  Blog post. J.A. Jablonski (website). https://jajablonski.com/2021/08/16/kj-charles-will-darling-pt2/

IMAGE CREDITS

Covers of The Will Darling Adventures. From KJ Charles Website.

Silhouette portraits of Will Darling, Kim Secretan, Maisie Jones, and Phoebe Stephens-Prince. From a Twitter book announcement by KJ Charles.

 

SOURCES

 

Disclaimer: As KJ Charles sells/promotes her books via her own website, I do not link to the Bookshop.org listings. See the first link below.

[1] Charles, KJ. (2020, 2021). The Will Darling Adventures. (Slippery Creatures, The Sugared Game, & Subtle Blood). KJC Books.

[2] Charles, KJ. (2021, May 24). How to Write a Book When You Can’t write a Book. Blog Post. KJ Charles website.

 

KJ Charles | The Will Darling Adventures | Pt. 1

Covers of KJ Charles books showing Darling & Kim Secretan facing each other
The Will Darling Adventures by K.J. Charles
Cover Art by Tiferet Design

 

The success of Charles’ storytelling is that she draws the reader into the narrative romp and the luxuriating passions while also promising the connection of souls that we also desire.

It’s been some time since I have found books so entertaining as The Will Darling Adventures trilogy by KJ Charles. [1] Though new to me, she’s been writing for a while now. This title is the first I’ve read of hers and I am looking forward to reading more.

Series description from Charles’ website:

A m/m romance trilogy in the spirit of Golden Age pulp fiction. It’s the 1920s and tensions are rising along with hemlines. Soldier-turned-bookseller Will Darling finds himself tangled up in spies and secret formulas, clubs and conspiracies, Bolsheviks, blackmail, and Bright Young Things. And dubious aristocrat Lord Arthur ‘Kim’ Secretan is right in the middle of it all: enigmatic, unreliable, and utterly irresistible.

I’d only discovered Charles, who has been writing for no small while, this past year after seeing a sharply written, witty retweet of hers on Twitter. And although I do not typically read in the romance genre, Reader, I followed her immediately and started in with Book 1 of the series.

Slippery Creatures opens things in a mostly certainly lively fashion. The 1963 movie Tom Jones (with Albert Finney in the titular role) came to mind immediately. [2] Specifically, the famous eating scene. Here is Wook Kim’s 2012 summary of it:

KJ Charles magpie logo“Bawdy, boisterous, and full of heart, ‘Tom Jones’ won four Oscars, including Best Picture and Best Director (for Terry Richardson). In the film’s perhaps most famous scene, the raffish but utterly charming Tom (Albert Finney) shares a tavern meal with a Mrs. Waters (who, unbeknownst to Tom, just may be his mother). The dinner begins innocently enough, but their furtive glances soon turn into almost incandescent gazing: even a village fool can see where this is going. It’s a simple two-shot scene, oft parodied, that fleshes out, both literally and figuratively, the sometimes eye-winkingly genteel descriptions in Henry Fielding’s picaresque novel.” [3]

The young Finney, I imagine, would be a lovely Will Darling, the rough and tumble, murderous WWI soldier turned bookseller in Creatures. Opposite him, as the charming and devious Lord Arthur “Kim” Secretan, I’d cast Matthew Goode. In fact, for all that Creatures is set in England in the 1920s after the so-called Great War, I kept harkening back to my grad school days when I seriously considered shifting from my focus on medieval lit to 18th-century stuff. Tom Jones, yes, and the roaring, bawdy William Hogarth, “English painter, printmaker, pictorial satirist, social critic, and editorial cartoonist.” (Wikipedia) Not surprisingly, Tom Jones author Henry Fielding was a friend.

Hogarth engraving of young man in bed with partially clothed woman

Hogarth’s engraving of

The Idle ‘Prentice return’d from Sea & in a Garret with a common Prostitute, 1747

Creatures has that kind of joie de vivre, raucous, broadly adventurous, and terrifically sexy. Here’s the quick intro  from Charles’ website:

Will Darling came back from the Great War with a few scars, a lot of medals, and no idea what to do next. Inheriting his uncle’s chaotic second-hand bookshop is a blessing…until strange visitors start making threats. First a criminal gang, then the War Office, both telling Will to give them the information they want, or else. Will has no idea what that information is, and nobody to turn to, until Kim Secretan—charming, cultured, oddly attractive—steps in to offer help. As Kim and Will try to find answers and outrun trouble, mutual desire grows along with the danger. And then Will discovers the truth about Kim. His identity, his past, his real intentions. Enraged and betrayed, Will never wants to see him again. But Will possesses knowledge that could cost thousands of lives. Enemies are closing in on him from all sides—and Kim is the only man who can help. A 1920s m/m romance trilogy in the spirit of Golden Age pulp fiction.

It took me a bit to get into Creatures as I am, admittedly, a reader with serious attitude. I almost put it down as a no-go, in part because the character of the bookseller is such a worn trope. I follow Charles on Twitter, though. She is sharp, witty, opinionated, and writes a damn good tweet. So I skipped ahead a chapter or two and, oh wonderful! Creatures indeed resurrects the Golden Age of pulp fiction in that it is action-packed, clever and funny, and moves the reader along right proper. What’s unique and particularly intriguing and frankly, appreciated, is its eroticism, queer specifically.

Charles notes on her Content Warnings web page that all of her “full-length novels contain on-page sex and swearing.” On-page, oh my, yes. (Though the swearing in Creatures escaped me, I have to admit. Then again, the F-word is so frequent in my own natterings that I hardly see it.) The sex is explicit, occasionally quite raw, and matter of fact. It is also historically accurate in that Charles keeps the mindset of her characters in their time period. On that Warnings page she states that her “books are historicals and thus set against a background of Georgian/Victorian/20s British attitudes to sex and gender. I’ve mentioned homophobia where it’s explicit.” 

Will Darling and Kim Secretan cannot be out though Secretan’s proclivities are known to certain colleagues. Secretan has a fiancée–the delightfully solid Phoebe Stephens-Prince–and Darling a good friend, the pragmatic and smart Maisie Jones. So their couplings are intense but always guarded. It adds to the sexual tension that they are so but also brings painfully to mind how even now the LGBTQ community lives, or is forced to live, in society’s substrates.

For all that Creatures is a kind of romp, with the underlying humor of the noir and pulp fiction genres, the storytelling rests profoundly on Charles’ solid historical accuracy. There is a sobering tone: the social and emotional impact of World War I on a generation.
Wounded & gassed World War 1 soldiers march in a line, each with a hand on the man before him

“Gassed”
Imperial War Museum, London, John Singer Sargent, c. March 1919

At one point Darling has been captured and, it seems, likely left to die. As he struggles in darkness and cold, his time in the filthy trenches fills his mind. At another point, describing to Secretan what it was like to kill, the deep flavor of his actions vibrates from the page.
 

Like the current pandemic, Death doesn’t simply hover. It is quite real. Former soldier Darling isn’t simply a victim of war. Killing remains a visceral component of his psychology and behavior. Secretan, whose younger brother served as his war surrogate and died in his place, and who is himself something of what was referred to in 1920s London as a Bright Young Thing, is made melancholy and driven by the loss. Yes, there is sex for these two, but the sex is as much driven by a mortality-wrought aphrodisia as it is their own desires.

Charles describes The Will Darling Adventures series as a romance trilogy. She promises a happy ending, as she does for all her works. Will and Kim are of that mode, but they are also of an older tradition, that of romantic friends. I rather like the Wikipedia description of this:

“A romantic friendship, passionate friendship, or affectionate friendship is a very close but typically non-sexual relationship between friends, often involving a degree of physical closeness beyond that which is common in the contemporary Western societies. It may include for example holding hands, cuddling, hugging, kissing, giving massages, and sharing a bed, without sexual intercourse or other physical sexual expression.”

In Slippery Creatures the emotional tenor of a romantic friendship is just aborning as is the sexual romance. The success of Charles’ storytelling is that she draws the reader into the narrative romp and the luxuriating passions while also promising the connection of souls that we also desire. Quite a feat for a novel with such a breezing style and relative brevity.

See Part 2 of this review here.

 

NOTE: This essay is an updated version reviews I originally published on my artist blog, Dante’s Wardrobe.

© J.A. Jablonski 2021. All rights reserved.

 ABOUT BOOK THOUGHTS

“Book Thoughts” is an intermittent column within my blog. The essays are not so much book reviews as book responses. I like to converse with and around the books I read.

 

HOW TO CITE THIS POST

Jablonski, J.A. (2021, Aug 16). KJ Charles |The Will Darling Adventures | Pt. 1. Blog post. J.A. Jablonski (website). https://jajablonski.com/2021/08/16/kj-charles-will-darling-pt1/

 

IMAGE CREDITS

Covers of The Will Darling Adventures. From KJ Charles Website.

KJ Charles logo. From KJ Charles Website.

William Hogarth, The Idle ‘Prentice return’d from Sea & in a Garret with a common Prostitute, 1747. Public domain via Wikipedia.

“Gassed”  Imperial War Museum, London, John Singer Sargent, c. March 1919. Via Wikipedia.

 

SOURCES

 

Disclaimer: As KJ Charles sells/promotes her books via her own website, I do not link to the Bookshop.org listings. See the first link below.

[1] Charles, KJ. (2020, 2021). The Will Darling Adventures. (Slippery Creatures, The Sugared Game, & Subtle Blood). KJC Books.

[2] Tom Jones film info via Wikipedia. Info on the original book (also from Wikipedia), The History of Tom Jones, a Foundling, by Henry Fielding. 

[3]  Kim, Wook. (2012, Jan 5). Top 10 Memorable Movie Eating Scenes. Populist column from Time.com.