Reviews for Precious And Grace

by Alexander McCall Smith

Kirkus
Copyright © Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Three new problems, only one involving an actual client, for the No. 1 Ladies Detective Agency.Susan Peters was born in Molepolole and spent four years of her childhood in Gaborone, but shes passed her adult life in Toronto. Disappointed in love, shes looking to connect to her past, and she wants Mma Precious Ramotswe and her associate, Mma Grace Makutsi, to find her childhood home and the nurse she remembers only as Rosie. The blurred photograph of Rosie she shares with Botswanas foremost detective agency (Chance Developments, 2016, etc.) isnt much of a lead, but the sleuths, aided by their associate Charlie, get down to work. Other matters repeatedly upstage the case. Fanwell, the assistant mechanic at Tlokweng Road Speedy Motorsthe company owned by Mr. J.L.B. Matekoni, Mma Ramotswes husbandhas run over a dog thats become perversely attached to him and insists on returning to the agency no matter what. And Mr. Polopetsi, who divides his professional hours between teaching chemistry and consulting at the agency, has added a new activity: going around Gaborone pushing shares in the Fat Cattle Club, an investment opportunity that Mma Ramotswe instantly recognizes as a pyramid scheme. As usual, theres even more low-level intrigue simmering in the background, from a lovelorn mans plea to Mma Ramotswe to help him find a nice girl to the detectives midnight encounter with a snake to the nomination of business consultant Violet Sephotho, Mma Makutsis sworn enemy, as Woman of the Year. The result is a gossamer web that feels miscellaneous even by the loose standards of this celebrated franchise. More than ever, the rewards are local and properly humble, as in every moment experience and wisdom triumph over the blinkered clichs they regularly confront. Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.


Publishers Weekly
(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved

"Forgiveness is often the solution," observes Precious Ramotswe toward the end of Smith's warmhearted, humane 17th No. 1 Ladies' Detective Agency novel (after 2015's The Woman Who Walked in Sunshine). Mma Ramotswe is referring to the book's main case, which involves a Canadian woman in her late 30s, Susan, who spent her childhood years in Botswana and now wants to find Rosie, the nurse maid largely responsible for raising her. Mma Ramotswe places an ad in a Gaborone newspaper, which brings a woman who claims to be Rosie to the detective agency. Grace Makutsi, the agency's prickly codirector, suspects this Rosie is a fraud, while Mma Ramotswe senses something not quite right about Susan's quest. Meanwhile, the ladies deal with a couple of minor cases: their assistant Fanwell rescues a stray dog that needs a home, and Mr. Polepetsi, their sometime helper, becomes an unwitting pawn in a pyramid scheme involving cattle. As ever, Smith adroitly mixes gentle humor with important life lessons. Agent: Robin Straus, Robin Straus Agency. (Nov.) © Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.


Book list
From Booklist, Copyright © American Library Association. Used with permission.

*Starred Review* This seventeenth installment of McCall Smith's wildly popular No. 1 Ladies' Detective Agency series is that rare find in a long-running series: a book that can appeal both to newcomers and to longtime fans. The opening pages, in which Mma Precious Ramotswe, who founded and owns the only detective agency in Botswana, drives her beloved, battered white van along the bumpy road to her office and thinks about the people in her life, both living (in some cases, only too obviously present) and dead, is a brilliant reconstruction of the previous 16 novels' major characters. For those familiar with the series, it's like meeting old friends, with nice touches that appear in every novel, including the 97 grade that Precious' one-time secretary and now co-director, Mma Grace Makutsi, earned at the Botswana Secretarial College and brings up in nearly every conversation. Much of this book shows the prickly, comic-yet-loving relationship between Precious and Grace, with Precious nimbly sidestepping Grace's massive ambition. There is a central case, that of a woman from Canada who grew up in Botswana and wants to find her old home. There's also a local pyramid scheme that threatens to sink a part-time, sad-sack employee of the agency. But these cases lead to what is most fascinating in McCall Smith's writing the way he uses clients' problems as a springboard into wise Precious' reflections on how to live. As always, a marvelous mix of humor, startling incidents, contemporary African setting, and memorable characters. HIGH-DEMAND BACKSTORY: A long-running series with a built-in audience that always craves more the recipe for success in crime fiction.--Fletcher, Connie Copyright 2016 Booklist