Author | Jane Harper |
---|---|
Series | Aaron Falk |
Genre | Mystery |
Publication date | September 20, 2022 |
ISBN | 9781250874863 |
Preceded by | Force of Nature |
Exiles is a 2022 mystery novel by British-Australian author Jane Harper. It is the third and final book in the Aaron Falk series, which also includes The Dry and Force of Nature.
Plot
editExiles takes place six years after the events of The Dry. Aaron Falk is visiting Marralee, a fictional town in the South Australian wine country, for the christening of his godson, Henry, who is the son of Aaron's friends Greg and Rita Raco. The christening was postponed from the previous year after Kim Gillespie, the ex-wife of Greg's brother Charlie, went missing at the annual Marralee food and wine festival, leaving her infant daughter, Zoe, alone in a pram. Greg, a police officer who grew up in Marralee, asks Aaron to help him investigate Kim's disappearance.
Also investigating is ____, a Marralee police officer who finds it suspicious that Kim did not speak to any of her friends on the night of her disappearance. His daughter died as a result of alcohol abuse, and he now does charity work to prevent alcohol abuse among teenagers.
Many people have assumed that Kim committed suicide by jumping into a nearby river, citing Kim's history of depression, her recent withdrawal from her friends, and the discovery of one of her shoes near the river. However, Kim's teenage daughter, Zara, is convinced that Kim could not have committed suicide because she would not have abandoned Zoe. Zara also argues that Kim could not have left through the exit leading to the river because Joel Tozer, a friend of Zara's, was stationed at the exit for the entire night and did not see her leave.
Zara and Joel ask Aaron to consider that Kim's disappearance may not have been the result of suicide. They also ask Aaron to investigate the death of Joel's father, Dean Tozer, who was killed in a hit-and-run five years earlier. Joel shows Aaron a video he took of the accident scene, as well as chips from a traffic barrier that hold remnants of paint from the car that killed his father.
Meanwhile, Aaron develops a romance with Gemma Tozer, the organizer of the Marralee food and wine festival and Joel's stepmother. Aaron and Gemma had previously met in Melbourne more than a year earlier, when both were scheduled to meet with Greg Raco, a mutual friend, who canceled at the last minute. Aaron and Gemma had dinner together and Aaron asked for Gemma's phone number, but Gemma did not give it to him. Later, Gemma explained that she did not give Aaron her phone number because she predicted that any future relationship between them would end in heartbreak, with neither wanting move or give up their career.
At this year's food and wine festival,
Six months later,
Characters
edit- Aaron Falk- an officer with the Australian Federal Police who specializes in investigating financial crimes. He is visiting Marralee for the christening of his godson, Henry Raco.
- Kim Gillespie- mother of Zoe and Zara, ex-wife of , and wife of. Kim grew up in Marralee and went missing at the previous year's food and wine festival.
- Greg and Rita Raco- friends of Aaron
Background and Publication History
editReception
editExiles was reviewed positively in The New York Times, People, Publishers Weekly, and The Sydney Morning Herald, a
However, the novel was reviewed more critically in The Harvard Crimson, which called it "an underwhelming mystery novel with a disappointing twist and a conclusion that is barely satisfactory."[1]
References
editDraft: Lady Enid Layard
Lady Enid Layard, b. 1843, d. 1912 (aged 68),was a Welsh diarist and noblewoman. Her posthumously published journals were written over 51 years, from 1869 to 1912. She was married to English archeologist Sir Austen Henry Layard, best known for his excavation of Nineveh.
Early Life
editLayard was born Mary Enid Evelyn Guest in Merthyr Tydful, Wales on July 1, 1842 or 1843.[2][3] Her father was Sir Josiah Guest, the first Member of Parliament for Merthyr Tydful and owner of the Dowlais Ironworks. Her mother was the writer and aristocrat Lady Charlotte Guest. Layard was the eight of ten children and was largely raised by a governess, Emily Kemble.[4]
In 1846, Layard's family moved to Cranford Manor (now Canford School) near Wimborne, Dorset.
Josiah Guest died in 1852, and in 1855, Lady Charlotte married Charles Schrieber, who had previously worked as a tutor in the Guest household.[4]
Marriage
editOn March 9, 1869, Layard married Austen Henry Layard, a cousin of her mother's.[2] At the time, Sir Austen was 51 years old and Enid was 25.[4] Their marriage was reportedly happy, and they never had children.[5][4]
Upon their marriage, Sir Austen gifted Lady Enid a necklace made from ancient seals he had acquired during his excavations. The seals in the necklace roughly date from 2200 BC to 350 BC and originated in the Akkadian Empire, Babylonia, the Achaemenid Empire, and Assyria.[6] According to her diary, Lady Enid reportedly wore the necklace to dine with Queen Victoria. donated the necklace to after her death.
Beginning in the 1870s, the Layards lived in Venice at the Palazzo Cappello Layard (also referred to as Ca' Capello Layard). The couple reportedly filled their house with a wide array of European and Middle Eastern art and hosted artistic salons.
Diary
editLayard began writing her diary in 1869, and continued until her death in 1912. The diary consists of more than 8,000 pages and nearly 14,000 entries,[4] largely of descriptions of Layard's social life and her travels.[7]
In her diary, Layard also wrote of several notable figures in her social circle, including Robert Browning
Death
editSources
editSources
https://archiveshub.jisc.ac.uk/search/archives/8e5bd763-ed85-3e29-aa15-f09227c220b2
https://discovery.nationalarchives.gov.uk/details/c/F49552
https://artcollection.culture.gov.uk/person/layard-mary-enid-evelyn-nee-guest-lady-layard/
https://www.academia.edu/41671316/Layard_in_Venice_a_rare_photograph_album
https://artsandculture.google.com/asset/lady-layard-s-jewellery/ywEtm1OetIkMdw?hl=en
https://www.westminster-abbey.org/abbey-commemorations/commemorations/henry-austen-layard
https://baylor-ir.tdl.org/handle/2104/11521
https://www.britishmuseum.org/collection/term/BIOG62494
https://www.browningguide.org/lady-layards-journal/
https://www.npg.org.uk/collections/search/person/mp100547/mary-enid-evelyn-nee-guest-lady-layard
https://victorianweb.org/art/design/jewelry/46.html
http://emmabandrews.org/project/items/show/119
https://pops.baylor.edu/layard/
https://collections.vam.ac.uk/item/O1433682/enid-layard-photograph-julia-margaret-cameron/
https://www.hanaa-malallah.com/post/a-tale-of-two-ruins-the-jewellery-of-plundering-and-violence
https://www.gardnermuseum.org/experience/collection/29232
https://www.britannica.com/biography/Austen-Henry-Layard
Amanda Sanford Hickey (28 August 1838 – 17 October 1894), was an American surgeon, obstetrician, and physician who practiced medicine in Auburn, New York. She was the first woman to earn a Doctor of Medicine from the University of Michigan Medical School.
Early Life and Education Portrait of Amanda Sanford Hickey
Amanda Sanford Hickey was born into a Quaker family on 28 August 1838 in Rhode Island. After the death of her father, she moved with her mother to Scipioville in Cayuga County, New York and attended the Friends' Academy in Union Springs, New York.
After graduating from the Friends' Academy, Hickey spent a year studying Greek and earning money from the cultivation of a vegetable garden. She then began working as a teacher at the Hawland School in Union Springs, while studying medicine on her own.
In 1868 or 1869, Hickey enrolled in the Woman's Medical College of Pennsylvania in Philadelphia, where she studied for one year. She interned at the New England Hospital for Women and Children in Boston, where she studied obstetrics under the instruction of Lucy Ellen Sewall and Marie Elizabeth Zakrzewska. Her colleagues at the hospital included Emma Louise Call and Eliza Mosher.
In 1872, Hickey graduated with the highest honors from the University of Michigan Medical School, becoming the first female graduate of the institution. Hickey wrote her thesis on puerperal eclampsia.In his graduation speech, Henry F. Lyster honored Hickey by saying, "It is my pleasing duty to welcome to the profession a woman coming from these halls." Some male students reportedly fired spitballs at Hickey as she received her diploma.
Career
After earning her medical degree, Hickey opened a private medical practice in Auburn, New York. She was the first woman to open a medical practice in Auburn. In 1879, she travelled to London with her friend, fellow physician Eliza Mosher, to observe the medical practices and facilities there. In London, Hickey and Sewall learned of new practices such as listerism and laparotomies. The pair then travelled to Paris at the suggestion of Elizabeth Blackwell, where they continued to observe European medical practices.
Upon her return to the United States in 1880, Hickey became a founding staff member of Auburn City Hospital, now Auburn Community Hospital, and remained on the hospital staff until her death. She established the Maternity Cottage, a dedicated maternity ward at the hospital, which was later named in her honor. She also had "a reputation as an outstanding surgeon, performing intra-abdominal surgery with above-average success."
Hickey was a member of the Medical Society of New York and served as president of the Cayuga County Medical Society. A supporter of women's rights and universal suffrage, she was a founding member of the Cayuga County Political Equality Club.
She married Patrick Hickey, a widower with children, in 1884, and continued to practice medicine.
Death and Legacy
Hickey died of pneumonia on 17 October 1894, and was buried in Scipioville, New York. According to her obituary in Medical Record, she contracted the disease "it is supposed, by chill after assisting at a tedious abdominal operation in an overheated room."
Sanford House of Bursley Hall at the University of Michigan is named for Hickey. As of July 2023, Dr. Lona Moody was Amanda Sanford Hickey Professor of Internal Medicine at the University of Michigan.
- ^ "'Exiles' Review: An Immersive Mystery Novel Underwhelms | Arts | The Harvard Crimson". www.thecrimson.com. Retrieved 2023-04-26.
- ^ a b "Layard (Austen Henry) Archive - Archives Hub". archiveshub.jisc.ac.uk. Retrieved 2023-02-22.
- ^ "Collections Online | British Museum". www.britishmuseum.org. Retrieved 2023-02-22.
- ^ a b c d e "Lady Layard's Journal | The Brownings: A Research Guide". www.browningguide.org. Retrieved 2023-02-09.
- ^ pixeltocode.uk, PixelToCode. "Henry Austen Layard". Westminster Abbey. Retrieved 2023-02-22.
- ^ "Lady Layard's jewellery". Google Arts & Culture. Retrieved 2023-02-22.
- ^ "JOURNALS OF MARY ENID EVELYN LAYARD". searcharchives.bl.uk. Retrieved 2023-02-22.