
Member Reviews

My first book by this author. I know she has written several series so I have a lot of books to catch up with. An interesting and twisty plot

EXCERPT: Stan entered stage left. Of course he did; he was the villain. Villains always enter from the left, the good fairy from the right. It's the first law of pantomime. But, in this case, Stan Parks (the Wicked Baron) came running onto the stage in answer to a scream from Alice Dean (Robin Hood). He came quickly because Alice was not normally given to screaming. Even when Stan had tried to kiss her behind the flat depicting Sherwood Forest she hadn't screamed; instead she had simply delivered an efficient uppercut that had left him winded for hours. So he responded to the sound, in his haste falling over two giant toadstools and a stuffed fox.
The stage was in semi-darkness, some of the scenery still covered in dustsheets. At first Stan could only make out shapes, bulky and somehow ominous, and then he saw Alice, kneeling centre stage, wearing a dressing gown over her Principal Boy tights. She was still screaming, a sound that seemed to get louder and louder until it reached right up to the gods and the empty boxes. Opposite her something swung to and fro, casting a monstrous shadow on the painted forest.
Stan stopped, suddenly afraid to go any further. Alice stopped screaming and Stan heard her say something that sounded like 'please' and 'no'. He stepped forward. The swinging object was a bower, a kind of basket chair, where the Babes in the Wood were meant to shelter before being covered with leaves by mechanical robins (a striking theatrical effect). The bower should have been empty because the Babes didn't rehearse in the afternoon. But, as Stan got closer, he saw that it was full of something heavy, something that tilted it over to one side. Stan touched the basket, suddenly afraid of it's awful, sagging weight. But he saw Betsy Bunning, the fifteen-year-old girl who was playing the female Babe. She lay half in, half out of the swinging chair. Her throat had been cut and the blood had soaked through her white dress and was dripping heavily onto the boards.
It was odd. Later, Stan would go through two world wars, see sights guaranteed to turn any man's blood to ice, but nothing ever disturbed him quite as much as the child in the wicker bower, the blood on the stage and the screams of the Principal Boy.
ABOUT 'SMOKE AND MIRRORS': Brighton, winter 1951.
Pantomime season is in full swing on the pier with Max Mephisto starring in Aladdin, but Max’s headlines have been stolen by the disappearance of two local children. When they are found dead in the snow, surrounded by sweets, it’s not long before the press nickname them ‘Hansel and Gretel’.
DI Edgar Stephens has plenty of leads to investigate. The girl, Annie, used to write gruesome plays based on the Grimms’ fairy tales. Does the clue lie in Annie’s unfinished – and rather disturbing – last script? Or might it lie with the eccentric theatricals who have assembled for the pantomime?
For Stan (aka the Great Diablo), who’s also appearing in Aladdin, the case raises more personal memories. Back before the Great War, he witnessed the murder of a young girl while he was starring in another show, an event which has eerie parallels to the current case.
Once again Edgar enlists Max’s help in penetrating the shadowy theatrical world that seems to hold the key. But with both distracted by their own personal problems, neither can afford to miss a trick. For Annie and her friend, time is running out…
MY THOUGHTS: This is the only book in the Brighton Mysteries series that I hadn't read, so I was excited to stumble upon it on my Kindle when I was searching for something else, and started it immediately. I don't know how I missed it originally, but apologies to both author and publisher for the tardiness of my review.
I have loved this entire series and Smoke and Mirrors, #2 in the series, is no exception. Set in Brighton, 1951 in the pantomime season in the lead up to Christmas, there is a definite similarity between the current murder and one which occurred of a pantomime cast member in Hastings in 1912. Some of the same pantomime cast members are even on hand.
Smoke and Mirrors is a deliciously twisty mystery with a tremendous range of red herrings and some sharp detective work from DI Edgar Stephens and Sergeant Emma Holmes. As always Elly Griffiths has created a charming but sinister atmosphere in which she sets her story. Two children have literally vanished into thin air, one of whom writes macabre and violent tales, and several characters associated with the children who are perhaps more than they seem combine to produce a clever, engaging and gripping story of magic and muder that had me reading through the night. My suspicions swung wildly from one character to another but never actually alit on the actual murderer.
The children, both the missing and the present, are the stars of this tale. The precocious and imaginative Annie, her friend and acolyte Mark, her younger sister Betty, apparently even more intelligent and imaginative than her older sister, and Richard who loves and admires his sisters provide much entertainment and speculation.
A ripping good murder mystery.
⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐
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T: @ellygriffiths @QuercusBooks
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THE AUTHOR: Elly Griffiths' Ruth Galloway novels take for their inspiration Elly's husband, who gave up a city job to train as an archaeologist, and her aunt who lives on the Norfolk coast and who filled her niece's head with the myths and legends of that area. Elly has two children and lives near Brighton.
DISCLOSURE: Thank you to Quercus Books via Netgalley for providing a digital ARC of Smoke and Mirrors by Elly Griffiths for review. All opinions expressed in this review are entirely my own personal opinions.
For an explanation of my rating system please refer to my Goodreads.com profile page or the about page on sandysbookaday.wordpress.com
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The second book in Elly Griffiths series featuring DI Stephens, and actor/magician Max Mephisto is set in Brighton, about a year after the events in the Zig Zag Girl, during the winter of 1951.
When two young children go missing, and are later found dead in a snow bank surrounded by sweets, DI Edgar Stephens, and his officers, Emma Holmes and Bob Willis, are tasked to investigate. With a frightened community demanding that the killer of “Hansel and Gretel” be found, and little evidence to go on, Stephens turns to his old friend Max for information after drawing a possible link to the theatrical scene.
I was a little disappointed that Max didn’t have a larger role in Smoke and Mirrors. I enjoyed their partnership in The Zig Zag Girl, Edgar’s cynical nature contrasts well with Max’s flamboyance. Emma and Bob are solid characters though, and I liked learning more about them, particularly Emma’s experience as a female officer during the time period.
The mystery in Smoke and Mirrors is well crafted, and interesting. Griffiths plays up the darker themes of Grimm’s fairytales to great effect, and skilfully injects red herrings to keep you guessing,
One of the strengths of this series remains its sense of time and place. The author wonderfully evokes the social climate of post war England, and the ambience of Brighton.
Smoke and Mirrors can be read as a stand alone, but the experience is richer if you are familiar with the first book. I hope there will be more.

I have read all of this author’s books from the Ruth Galloway series of books and loved every single one of them. I have been more dubious with the Stephen and Mephisto series as it appears quite different from the other series. This is book #2 in the series, but it can be read as a standalone – I did! I haven’t read the first one of the series yet and happen to be reading them out of order. The series is based in the 1950’s and this book (I’m not sure with the others in the series) is set in the world of the theatre during the pantomime season on Brighton Pier. DI Edgar Stephens is investigating the disappearance of two children and calls upon the help of actor and friend, Max Mephisto, to help in the investigation.
I found it so completely different to the Ruth Galloway series I’m used to with this author! The style of writing was different and more of a slower pace. The actual story was interesting and I loved the setting of post-war Brighton. I couldn’t connect very well with the main characters, but this may be because I’m still biased towards Ruth Galloway! Perhaps in time they will grow on me! I will still definitely read the first book and follow the series after.