Black Jade Audiolibro Por Gloria Oliver arte de portada

Black Jade

A Daiyu Wu Mystery (Daiyu Wu Mysteries, Book 1)

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Black Jade

De: Gloria Oliver
Narrado por: Tom Briggs
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A curious lack of corpses. A slew of snobbish suspects. Can this sightless amateur sleuth pinpoint a killer?

Dallas, TX, 1930. Daiyu Wu refuses to be disadvantaged by her blindness. Navigating the world with help from her faithful companions, the young Chinese adventuress celebrates life with a strong thirst for knowledge. So when she scents burned garlic in a customer’s garment, the clever laundress runs an experiment that reveals a dress doused in arsenic.

Determined to provide the unaware authorities with a clue in a murder case, Daiyu vows to chase down the garment’s mysterious origins even though there’s no body to be found. But as the links lead the immigrant girl higher into Texas’s social echelons, she clashes with bigotry, short-sightedness, and a web of lies hamstringing her ability to investigate.

Can she find fresh evidence before she’s hung out to dry?

Black Jade is the playful first book in the Daiyu Wu Mysteries cozy historical series. If you like witty heroines, clever twists, and feisty canines, then you’ll love Gloria Oliver’s period puzzle.

Buy Black Jade to pit instinct against old money today!

©2021 Gloria Oliver (P)2022 Gloria Oliver
Acogedor Detective Aficionado Histórico Misterio
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El oyente recibió este título gratis

The first book in this historical cozy mystery series introduces us to Daiyu Wu, a blind Chinese woman, and her friend Jacques. The story is told from Jacques' POV, like Watson relates Sherlock Holmes' adventures.

I like Jacques. He's fiercely loyal and protective, plus his take on events is hilarious at times. The story is well paced and has a twist I didn't see coming st the end. The setting is 1930s Texas, which is not typical, but the prevailing attitudes and difficulties Daiyu faces for being blind, Chinese, and female are depicted well.

Tom Briggs narrates the story. Overall, he does well, but there are a few glitches — sometimes it sounds a bit echo-y, there are repeated phrases, and at one point I heard a mouse clicking. These things distracted me in the moment.

Interesting start to a cozy series

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El oyente recibió este título gratis

This was an interesting book to read, maybe not so much listening to it. The narrator made it hard to keep focused with the story. Going past that the story line is very detailed and the characters are detailed.

Its okay

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El oyente recibió este título gratis

Black Jade by Gloria Oliver is the first in the Daiyu Wu Mystery Series. Set in Dallas in 1930, Texas, this book revolves around the life of Daiyu Wu, a blind Chinese immigrant who works for her family's laundry service and her foster brother Jacques Haskins. As a result of her blindness, Daiyu's other senses are elevated and when a gown is left for cleaning that has a distinctive odor of burnt garlic, she quickly realizes that it has possibly been utilized to commit murder but she and Jacques need to figure out not only who committed the crime but also who the victim was.

The author does an excellent job of detailing the inherent prejudices against persons of Oriental descent in the United States during the 1930s as well as providing information related to application of arsenic poisoning. However, I found that in places this book dragged on with repetitive information related to various character situations during the course of the story; however, the overall character development was exceptional as the reader is able to know their inner feelings and circumstances.

The narrator was good as far as creation of different voices for the characters but at times appeared to stumble and pause longer than necessary for chapter changes. I look forward to seeing how this series develops and the relationships grow in the future.

I received a copy of this audiobook from the Author and StoryOrigin in exchange for a fair and honest review.

1930s Mystery with a Hint of Prejudices

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cultural-heritage, cultural-differences, protective-dogs, family, friendship, wealthy, Texas, Chinese-culture, Chinese-customs, diverse-cultures, 1930, family-business, immigrants, shunned, multicultural, murder, murder-investigation, bodyguard, class-consciousness, investigation, historical-novel, historical-places-events, historical-research, history-and-culture, law-enforcement, medical-doctor*****

Daiyu Wu who is so much more than simply the only one of her parents' children to be born alive and survive. But she has been blind from birth, and Jacques is more than a childhood companion become chauffer and defender (as is her faithful dog, Prince) and his is the perspective of the novel.
Daiya has a very observant mind undistracted by visual input, has deductive reasoning down to a science, and an impeccable memory. The plot basics are well done in the publisher's blurb, so there is no need to repeat or do the spoiler thing. I loved this story!
Narrator Tom Briggs seems an odd choice with his slight hoarseness being magnified by the sound effect as if speaking in a large empty room as well as my personal need to play at 1.25 speed. Delineation of characters and emotions was good.

Great new series!

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In "Black Jade", Gloria Oliver introduces people to amateur sleuth, Daiyu Wu. She's driven, determined, and insatiably curious - These would normally be considered good qualities to have, but unfortunately, stereotypes about women, the blind and visually impaired, and people of Chinese heritage ran rampant in 1930s Dallas, just as they did elsewhere, and sadly, still do today with so many ethnic and marginalized groups.

Dai, as she's called by those closest to her, lives with her more than slightly overbearing parents, her brother Jacques, and her faithful canine companion Prince Razor.

While working at the family's laundry service, Dai smells the unmistakable scent of arsenic on a dress brought in by a customer earlier the previous day. She learns that it belongs to a young woman who was found dead a few days before. Convinced that the dress is connected to the murder, with help from an extremely reluctant Jacques, Dai endeavors to track down the culprit and bring them to justice.

Not only did I enjoy the story immensely, but I learned so much about Chinese history and culture and American history and culture in the 1930s - lots of new vocabulary and customs. I'm so glad Gloria Oliver plans to continue the series!

I also really love the fact that there's finally a sleuth with a disability. I don't enjoy the fact that Dai is blind, but it's nice to see the disabled population being represented and portrayed as doing something that able-bodied professional detectives normally do, doing it well, and getting credit for it. I, too, have a physical disability, although in my case, I use a motorized wheelchair for mobility. I feel that Dai is a woman after my own heart - She's kind, compassionate, driven, hard-working, intelligent, and determined. She may be blind, but like me, she tries not to let her disability define her.




So glad the series will continue!

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