The New No. 1 Ladies Detective Agency
The Limpo Academy of Private Detection
by: Alexander McCall Smith
hardback 257 pages
2012
I just now realize that i have skipped a few mysteries in the
detective series written by Alexander McCall, for i was at the
library and thought i reading a book about Africa would be nice as i
seek to picture Sofi living there. I found the No.1 Ladies
Detective Series but because I was without my glasses a could not
tell which one was next for me to read. The Green book looked good
so i chose this one and right away i was transported back to an
Africa that i have never been but one that i had read of in Thailand
when i first was introduced to these delightful books.
Life goes at a slow pace and it is easy to get into step with Mma
Romostwe and those in her life in Botswana. The biggest news is
that Mma Makutsi is now married (that may have happened in the book
called The Saturday Big Tent Wedding Party) and she and her husband
are building a home. The matron of the orphanage, Mma Potokwane has
been forced out of her role...there is a need for a detective here
and how wonderful for the author of the "bible" of private
detection, Clovis Andersen, to have arrived in Botswana and to be
involved with the progress.
i always learn a new word or two when i read the detection stories
as Alexander McCall does a wonderful job in creating Africa in his
descriptions and in using a few local words to add to the flavor of
all the bush tea that gets consumed through the pages of the
mysteries as they are solved. "Pula, pula,pula!" is what i learned
this time and as page 187 tells, it "is the cry of triumph, of joy,
that was universal in Botswana. It mean rain, rain, rain,--just the
right cry for a dry country that lived for the day that the first
life-giving rains arrived-- that day of ominous purple skies, and
heat, and the wind that precedes the first drops of water spattering
on dancing on the baked ground."
Another great read, not too ambitious, but with good insight to
human character as seen through the eyes of a traditionally built
woman who has a heart as big as the country.
in my opinion, the books do not need to be read in order, for each
story gives enough detail for you to enjoy it on its own and each
has a satisfactory conclusion. For a closing remark i will quote
Mma Romostwe's thoughts on friendship, "New friendships can be every
bit as strong as old friendships, and of course became old
friendships in due course."
These books are like spending time with a good friend.
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