BOOK TITLE: OVERTURE TO MURDER
AUTHOR OF BOOK: ERICA MINER
GENRE: MYSTERY/THRILLER
ISBN: 1685127819
SERIES: JULIA KOGAN OPERA MYSTERY SERIES
PAGE COUNT: 300
PUBLISHER: LEVEL BEST BOOKS
AMAZON or FAVE LINK to BUY BOOK: https://www.amazon.com/Overture-Murder-Julia-Kogan-Mystery/dp/1685127819/
REVIEWER’S NAME AND PERMISSION TO REPRINT:
JESSICA FAHEY, THE SAN FRANCISCO BOOK REVIEW
Heidi K. Rojek, Owner
THE REVIEW ITSELF:
By Jessica Fahey, The San Francisco Book Review
FULL REVIEW HERE
(https://sanfranciscobookreview.com/product/overture-to-murder/)
Erica Miner’s Overture to Murder is an absorbing and intelligent addition to the Julia Kogan Opera Mystery series, combining the rarefied world of grand opera with the satisfying architecture of a classic whodunit. As a longtime lover of mysteries, I found this novel very rewarding.
Set against the formidable backdrop of Wagner’s Ring cycle at the San Francisco Opera, the novel opens with an atmosphere of tension and grandeur that immediately establishes both scale and stakes. The prologue, reaching back to 1922, lends the story a sense of legacy and continuity, while the present-day chapters immerse us in the complicated machinery of mounting Das Rheingold. Miner’s familiarity with the operatic world is evident from the first pages; the rehearsal dynamics, the politics between stage director and management, and the physical layout of the opera house feel authentic and meticulously observed.
Julia Kogan, the protagonist, is a particularly appealing heroine. Now serving as interim concertmaster after a suspicious hit-and-run injures her predecessor, Julia must navigate not only the technical demands of Wagner’s monumental score but also the fragile egos and rivalries that inevitably simmer behind the curtain. Julia’s relationship with her partner Larry and their precocious daughter Rebecca adds warmth and dimension to the narrative. The scenes of Julia teaching Rebecca violin, complete with the child’s imaginative interpretations of the strings, provide a tender counterpoint to the darker events unfolding at the opera house.
One of the most compelling aspects of the novel is Miner’s portrayal of backstage tensions. The abrasive stage director Yves Chauvet is drawn with sharp precision: ambitious, temperamental, and dismissive of others’ expertise. His public berating of Julia during rehearsal is both shocking and believable, and it sets the emotional groundwork for the tragedy that follows. When a fire alarm disrupts opening night and Chauvet is discovered dead in his dressing room, the transition from artistic drama to criminal investigation feels organic rather than contrived.
I especially enjoyed the way Miner layers professional hierarchies into the mystery. The general director, the orchestra manager, the house head, and the union dynamics; each plays a role in shaping both motive and opportunity. For readers like myself who relish procedural detail, these elements enrich the story rather than slow it down. The author’s background as a violinist shines through in the descriptions of rehearsal pressures, bow strokes, and the unique responsibility borne by a concertmaster. Those passages lend the book a gravitas that elevates it beyond a standard cozy.
In all, Overture to Murder is a polished and engaging mystery that will delight opera aficionados and general readers alike. It offers intellectual intrigue, vivid characterization, and a richly textured setting that lingers long after the final page.
Blurb:
"Divas and deadly secrets share center stage in Erica Miner's Overture to Murder, a classic mystery tale set at the San Francisco Opera House. Underpinning the plot of this delightfully twisty novel is a full-scale Wagnerian opera production that provides an apt metaphor for the action and a chilling backdrop for murder. The stakes could not be higher for violinist Julia Kogan, whose pursuit of a killer is rendered with all the immediacy of a live performance. Precise details, inside information about the glamorous world of classical music, and a cast of finely drawn characters propel the action from the opening curtain to the final bows. The suspenseful and surprising finish to this tale of mystery, music, and mayhem is a page-turner. Highly recommend." - Lori Robbins, author of the Master Class and On Pointe Mysteries
ABOUT THE AUTHOR: Former Metropolitan Opera violinist turned author ERICA MINER now has a multi-faceted career as an award-winning author, screenwriter, journalist and lecturer. Winner of the Fiction Prize in the Direct from the Author Book Awards for her debut novel, Travels With My Lovers, Erica has received kudos for her Julia Kogan Opera Mystery series published by Level Best Books, based on her experiences at the Met: ARIA FOR MURDER (2022); PRELUDE TO MURDER (2023); and OVERTURE TO MURDER (2024).
Erica writes music criticism for websites such as US Bachtrack; Classical Voice of North America; Broadway World and LA Opus. Her lectures and seminars on writing and opera have won praise at numerous arts and academic organizations including: the Seattle Symphony, the Osher Lifelong Learning Institute at the University of San Diego and University of Washington; and Wagner Societies across the US and in Australia. Erica’s writings also can be found in publications such as Leitmotive, the magazine of the Wagner Society of Northern California; Italian American Magazine; San Diego Jewish Journal; Del Mar Lifestyle; Opera+ St. Petersburg Music & Art Magazine; Vision Magazine; WORD San Diego; and Istanbul Our City.
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