Cathy C. (cathyskye) - , reviewed The Witch Doctor's Wife (Amanda Brown, Bk 1) on + 2307 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 3
First Line: The dominant female danced along the edge of the manioc field, impatiently waiting the arrival of her pack.
The plane young missionary Amanda Brown is traveling on crash lands outside the village of Belle Vue in the Belgian Congo, which is too forceful a way of telling her that she is no longer in South Carolina. Amanda's housekeeper, an evil-tempered man named Protruding Navel, is highly incensed when she hires a village woman named Cripple to take his place. Profits at the mine are not as high as stockholders would like. Love affairs are being conducted. People relive old tragedies with each new dawn. When one of the villagers stumbles upon a huge uncut diamond, events are put into place that could lead to nothing less than murder.
When I began my long and willing descent into mystery reading, Tamar Myers' cosy "Den of Antiquity" series set in South Carolina was one of the first that I devoured. I enjoyed Myers' sense of humor and way with words. The author has a second long-running "Pennsylvania-Dutch" series as well. In deciding to use her own background as child of missionaries in the Congo of the late 1950s, Tamar Myers has broken new ground in what I hope will be a very fertile field.
Myers' knowledge of the land and people of the 1950s Congo permeates every page, even when it's a small detail such as villagers knowing they had to get home before they heard the first sounds of the hyenas. The customs of the native peoples, how the whites lived and behaved, the landscape, the weather, the architecture... all of these things brought such verisimilitude to the book that I would rank The Witch Doctor's Wife right up there with Alexander McCall Smith and Michael Stanley.
I did have one problem with the book however: there were too many characters, and several of them didn't seem to have anything to do. I didn't get any of them confused; I just read and wondered why they were there. Myers is possibly setting up future books in a series, but I did find the character bounty awkward.
Normally I tell people not to believe blurbs that say, "If you like McCall Smith's #1 Ladies Detective Agency" because most of the time that merely means that the book is set somewhere on the African continent. This time, I would say a blurb like that would be true. There's a gentleness, a humor, and a wisdom to The Witch Doctor's Wife that does remind me of Precious Ramotswe. If Myers does continue to write about Amanda Brown, I'll continue to read the books. They're that good.
The plane young missionary Amanda Brown is traveling on crash lands outside the village of Belle Vue in the Belgian Congo, which is too forceful a way of telling her that she is no longer in South Carolina. Amanda's housekeeper, an evil-tempered man named Protruding Navel, is highly incensed when she hires a village woman named Cripple to take his place. Profits at the mine are not as high as stockholders would like. Love affairs are being conducted. People relive old tragedies with each new dawn. When one of the villagers stumbles upon a huge uncut diamond, events are put into place that could lead to nothing less than murder.
When I began my long and willing descent into mystery reading, Tamar Myers' cosy "Den of Antiquity" series set in South Carolina was one of the first that I devoured. I enjoyed Myers' sense of humor and way with words. The author has a second long-running "Pennsylvania-Dutch" series as well. In deciding to use her own background as child of missionaries in the Congo of the late 1950s, Tamar Myers has broken new ground in what I hope will be a very fertile field.
Myers' knowledge of the land and people of the 1950s Congo permeates every page, even when it's a small detail such as villagers knowing they had to get home before they heard the first sounds of the hyenas. The customs of the native peoples, how the whites lived and behaved, the landscape, the weather, the architecture... all of these things brought such verisimilitude to the book that I would rank The Witch Doctor's Wife right up there with Alexander McCall Smith and Michael Stanley.
I did have one problem with the book however: there were too many characters, and several of them didn't seem to have anything to do. I didn't get any of them confused; I just read and wondered why they were there. Myers is possibly setting up future books in a series, but I did find the character bounty awkward.
Normally I tell people not to believe blurbs that say, "If you like McCall Smith's #1 Ladies Detective Agency" because most of the time that merely means that the book is set somewhere on the African continent. This time, I would say a blurb like that would be true. There's a gentleness, a humor, and a wisdom to The Witch Doctor's Wife that does remind me of Precious Ramotswe. If Myers does continue to write about Amanda Brown, I'll continue to read the books. They're that good.
Helpful Score: 2
a really good book. i couldn't wait for the WL anymore so i checked it out from the library. fast read. interesting ending... i loved the story.
Helpful Score: 1
Great story and history of the Belgium Congo. Loved the cultural information and great story.
Mg N. (reading-voraciously) - , reviewed The Witch Doctor's Wife (Amanda Brown, Bk 1) on + 9 more book reviews
The Witch Doctor's Wife is wonderful. You need to try it even if you don't read her Antiquities and Penn Dutch stories. This draws on Myers' early childhood memories as the daughter of missionaries in Congo. It is an intriguing story and full of different characters ~ some mystifying and some really likable. The story is a mystery and the setting is a small village where there are many Europeans, several African tribes represented, and a few Americans.
After The Witch Doctor's Wife you will be eager to read The Headhunter's Daughter. Several of the characters return to the same Congo setting.
After The Witch Doctor's Wife you will be eager to read The Headhunter's Daughter. Several of the characters return to the same Congo setting.
Deborah H. (littlepine) - , reviewed The Witch Doctor's Wife (Amanda Brown, Bk 1) on + 169 more book reviews
I highly enjoyed this book. I found it to be a highly entertaining read. Myers' knowledge of the land and people of the 1950s Congo permeates every page due to the fact that she was born and raised in the Congo by her parents who were missionaries to a tribe that was known for being headhunters. I am looking forward to reading the next book in Amanda Brown's adventure called The Headhunter's Daughter that is due out in January of this year.
This was the best novel about Africa I've seen since Alexander McCall Smith's books came out a dozen years ago - and it's better than most of his later ones. Tamar Myers lived in central Africa as a child and her settings have the joyous clarity of a child's vision. Her characters are mature, complex, sincere and very, very African in their outlook. The novel begins with the crash of a plane bringing a young missionary to the Congo, and concerns a lost-and-found diamond as big as an egg, the relationship between the witch doctor's two wives, and the administration of justice along racial lines. I enjoyed the book very much and have ordered the second in the series.