"Exciting and colorful amateur sleuth novel"
Off the coast of the Florida Panhandle lay the Last Isles
and on Joyeuse lies the antebellum mansion belonging to
Faye Longchamp. It is badly in need of repairs but Faye
barely can pay taxes and the last thing she wants is lose
the home that has been in her family for generations. She
earns the money to pay the taxes by illegally digging up
artifacts on her land and the National Wild Refuge and
selling them to collectors whom don't care about the source. Faye also works on an archeological dig on nearby Seagreen
Island when two students in the group disappear. On a
hunch, Faye starts digging and finds the two bodies, both
shot to death. The dig is closed and Faye looks for
artifacts on Water Island when she comes under attack by a
man she thought was a friend and his partner who are
digging up priceless Clovis artifacts. When she digs up
the body of a young debutante who disappeared many years
ago she comes to the attention a killer who intends to make
Faye his fourth victim. Faye is b-iracial and doesn't feel as if there is a place
for her in mainstream society, which is why she is
determined to hold on to her land, the only place she
believes she belongs. She doesn't realize she has two
killers who want her dead before she discovers and reveals
their secrets. ARTIFACTS is an exciting and colorful
amateur sleuth novel that is rich in atmosphere giving the
reader a picture of what it takes to live in an island
culture. Harriet Klausner
Reviewed by Harriet Klausner
Posted March 31, 2003
SummaryFaye Longchamp has lost nearly everything except for her
quick mind and a grim determination to hang onto her
ancestral home, Joyeuse, a moldering plantation hidden
along the Florida coast. No one knows how Faye's great-
great-grandmother Cally, a newly freed slave barely out of
her teens, came to own Joyeuse in the aftermath of the
Civil War. No one knows how her descendants hung onto it
through Reconstruction, world wars, the Depression, and Jim
Crow, but Faye has inherited the island plantation—and the
family tenacity. When the property taxes rise beyond her
means, she sets out to save Joyeuse by digging for
artifacts on her property and the surrounding National
Wildlife Refuge and selling them on the black market. A
tiny bit of that dead glory would pay a year's taxes. A big
valuable chunk of the past would save her home forever.
But instead of potsherds and arrowheads, she uncovers a
woman's shattered skull, a Jackie Kennedy-style earring
nestled against its bony cheek. Faye is torn. If she
reports the forty-year-old murder, she'll reveal her
illegal livelihood, thus risking jail and the lose of
Joyeuse. She doesn't intend to let that happen, so she
probes into the dead woman's history, unaware that the past
is rushing up on her like a hurricane across deceptively
calm Gulf waters...
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