The Game (2004)


ISBN (US) 978-0-553-58338-0
ISBN (UK paperback) 9780749008581
The Game is the story of how, in the early weeks of 1924, Mary Russell and her partner Sherlock Holmes sail to India to search for a missing British spy. The man’s name is Kimball O’Hara — yes, Rudyard Kipling’s Kim. The boy of Kipling’s book is now a man in his forties, but remains deeply immersed in what was called “The Great Game,” the bitter art of espionage played out on India’s Northwest Frontier. That Victorian Cold War is still being fought in 1924, although the Russian team is now headed by Lenin, not the Tsar.
Nonetheless, the rules of engagement, as Russell learns, are much the same. The word “Game,” of course, also refers to quarry in a hunt, as well as to the serious matter Holmes fans undertake to work out the details of a life some would call fictional. As fictional, say, as that of Kim O’Hara, or of Mary Russell herself.
To read an excerpt of The Game, click here.

Read Laurie’s thoughts on writing The Game on her blog, Mutterings.

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Signed or not, here’s where you can buy the book.

What they say

Lush colorful and utterly compelling, this is a superbly wrought novel of suspense that evokes its period with enviable panache. FOUR STARS out of four stars.

Detroit Free Press

I think it may be my favorite since Beekeeper. The adventure! The jeopardy! The teamwork!” – from “The official Mary Russell site”

King [develops] a series of voluptuous set pieces: about the learning of language, prestidigitation, and disguise; about shipboard mores among the upper classes; about the daily habits of a maharaja’s many-splendored guests and how they are housed, fed, and entertained. All the while and underneath these musings develops a wondrously taut mystery, ticking away like a malevolent clock…. Fabulous reading, breathless excitement, and the myriad pleasures of watching great minds at work.

Booklist, starred review

cover-thegame-us-hcThe seventh Mary Russell adventure (after 2002’s Justice Hall) may well be the best King has yet devised for her strong-willed heroine. It’s 1924, and Kimball O’Hara, the “Kim” of the famous Rudyard Kipling novel, has disappeared. Fearing some kind of geopolitical crisis in the making, Mycroft Holmes sends his brother and Mary to India to uncover what happened… The sights, smells and ideas of India make interesting, evocative reading (Mary’s foray into the dangerous sport of pig-sticking is particularly fascinating). If for some Mary Russell is too perfect a character to be as enduringly compelling as Holmes, all readers will appreciate the grace and intelligence of King’s writing in this exotic masala of a book.

Publishers Weekly, starred reviewcover-thegame-uk-hc

Reading Laurie King is much like eating dark chocolate. The writing is rich and full, and full of surprises. … One of the best in this strong series.

Deadly Pleasures magazine

Stories in which women effortlessly pass as men can sometimes be very tiresome, stretching the reader’s credulity to breaking point. How, we wonder, can the rest of the characters be so downright gullible? But in The Game, the heroine has some satisfyingly narrow escapes. At various points in the story, her fear that she might be obliged to take part in a wrestling match or seduce a dancing girl winds the tension really tight. But in the end she wins through, and her willingness to tackle each new dilemma with style and deliciously ironic wit make Mary Russell a most appealing heroine.

Writing Magazine, April 2005

Buy It Here

Signed or not, here’s where you can buy the book.

Links

For a timeline and various links, go to Mary Russell’s World

For a review of The Game

The online edition of Rudyard Kipling’s Kim, a bookwhich has much to do with The Game

And a provocative article on Kim, Ian Mackean

A review of British India

And for an 1880 article on pig sticking, see here or see the 1911 article

To see the kind of plane flown in and out of Khanpur, see here

Allison and Busby, The Game’s UK publisher

For a bibliography and Laurie’s suggestions to teacher and book groups, click here.

Pictures







The entrance to New Fort, Khanpur Laurie with child, Taj Mahal (1981) The Himalayas from Simla



Shop selling pan and bidis Tibetan prayer beads
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This is Russellscape, an endless vista of linked scenes from the Russell and Holmes books. Go here for artist credits and here for instructions on how to submit yours.

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