A comedic murder mystery set on a college campus in upstate New York stars an offbeat heroine with an active imagination.
Twenty-nine-year-old Ruby Roy is an associate professor at Baron University’s College of Business, located not far from Niagara Falls. She’s the well-traveled only child of an Indian diplomat father and a Canadian mother, and she holds several postgraduate degrees from various prestigious universities. She also has a history of awkward moments and embarrassing incidents, due largely to bad luck and social anxiety. Now she’s working to get tenure at Baron, while her husband, Cleo, is attempting to create his first video game. Ruby is mostly happy at the university, where she has a coterie of eclectic international friends among the faculty. One evening, she returns to her office to retrieve a forgotten backpack and decides to say hello to her department chair, Dr. Peter Malcolm; instead, she discovers him sitting in his office chair, mouth agape and eyes staring lifelessly. A knife handle protrudes from his bloody chest. Then someone hits her on the head and knocks her unconscious. She wakes up in an ambulance and is questioned by police detective Chris Jones. Although badly shaken, Ruby is a fan of British detective shows and American TV police procedurals, and she soon feels compelled to investigate the murder herself. The narrative has all the right ingredients for an intriguing whodunit. However, Ray often chooses humor over suspense, indulging in numerous digressions and cartoonishly exaggerated characters. Many pages are filled with Ruby’s busy, fanciful interior musings, which draw on the tropes of action-hero adventures and Indian romantic musicals. It’s often a fun romp that occasionally borders on slapstick. It does lack a certain restraint, though; Ray tends to overexplain celebrity references that most will find obvious, and Ruby’s dream sequences are too lengthy. Still, the mystery builds to an exciting climax, and there’s an unexpected final twist.
An amusingly quirky read that might have benefited from a stronger edit.