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The Mysteries by Lisa Tuttle — book cover

The Mysteries

by Lisa Tuttle
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Overview

From award-winning author Lisa Tuttle comes a riveting novel that combines the contemporary story of one man’s search for a missing young woman with history’s most enduring legends of the disappeared. Gripping and unforgettable, here is a spellbinding mix of the mysteries that inhabit our everyday lives–and a mind-bending exploration of what happens when someone vanishes without a trace.

Ever since his father disappeared when he was nine years old, Ian Kennedy has had a penchant for stories about missing people–and a knack for finding them. Now he’s a private investigator with an impressive track record. But when a woman enters his London office and asks him to find her lost daughter, Ian faces a case he fears he cannot solve–and one he knows he must.

Laura Lensky’s stunning twenty-one-year-old daughter, Peri, has been missing for over two years–a lifetime, under the circumstances. But when Ian learns the details of her disappearance, he discovers eerie parallels to an obscure Celtic myth–and to the haunting case that launched his career, an early success he’s never fully been able to explain. Though Ian suspects Peri may have chosen to vanish, his curiosity leads him to take on the search. Soon he finds himself drawing not only from the mysteries that have preoccupied his adulthood, but from the fables and folklore that pervaded his youth. What follows is a journey that takes Ian and those who care for Peri into the Highlands of Scotland, as the unknowns of the past and present merge in the case–and in their lives.
Rich in pathos and steeped in secrets, The Mysteries opens a thought-provoking door from one world into the heart of another, where some of our most perplexing enigmas–and their answers–are startlingly alive.

From the Hardcover edition.

About the Author, Lisa Tuttle

Lisa Tuttle was born and raised in Houston, Texas, won the John W. Campbell Award for Best New Writer in 1974, and now lives with her husband and daughter on the west coast of Scotland. Her first novel, Windhaven, was written with George R. R. Martin. Other novels include Lost Futures, which was short-listed for the Arthur C. Clarke Award, The Pillow Friend, and The Mysteries.

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Editorials

Bill Sheehan

The Mysteries is filled with stories and legends -- all concerned with strange disappearances and uncanny encounters -- that supplement the central narrative, placing it in a vast, overarching mythological context. At the same time, the novel addresses Tuttle's ongoing concern with the crucial choices that ordinary people make -- choices that can bind them to the world of small, everyday accomplishments or send them in search of larger, more elusive alternatives. Successfully balancing the miraculous and the mundane, The Mysteries offers a variety of unexpected pleasures and marks the overdue return of a stylish, distinctive storyteller.
— The Washington Post

Publishers Weekly

Despite its contemporary settings (Scotland, London and Texas), Tuttle's superlative dark fantasy, her first novel since The Pillow Friend (1996), draws on the classic, largely Celtic folklore of people who vanish mysteriously because they have gone to the realm of the sidhe-the fairy folk. Some never return, at least not to their families. Others can be found again, such as Amy Schneider, rescued by the engaging Ian Kennedy, who took up a career of tracing such persons after going in search of his missing father. Some, like the melancholy woman who calls herself Fred, won't stay in the mundane world even if you try to force them. Ian is afraid this might be the trouble with his latest quarry, the beautiful Peri Lensky. Complications arise when Peri's boyfriend, Hugh Bell-Rivers, says she may have gone off with a man named Mider, which happens to be the name of a sidhe king. All the while, Ian is tormented by the disappearance of his own true love, Jenny Macedo, some years before. Tuttle has total command of setting, style and her folklore sources. The ambiguous ending holds out hope for both Ian and the reader. In a field overflowing with sequels, it's refreshing to find a fantasy that truly merits one. Agent, Howard Morhaim. (Mar. 8) Forecasts: Advance praise from Dean Koontz, George R.R. Martin, Kelley Armstrong and Michael Moorcock will remind readers that this John Campbell Award-winning author remains one of fantasy's best. Copyright 2005 Reed Business Information.

Kirkus Reviews

Urban fantasy set in present-day England and Scotland. Ian Kennedy is a London-based tracer of missing persons-a branch of detective work he became interested in when his own father abandoned his family. Business has gone badly of late, and so Ian depends on occasional checks from his American mother to get through. Now, Laura Lensky, another American working in London, wants him to find her daughter, 21 year-old Peri, who vanished two and a half years ago after a date with her boyfriend Hugh. Ian takes the case and looks through the various clues Laura gives him, including accounts of four people in Scotland who saw Peri, bedraggled and apparently pregnant, a few months after her disappearance, when she made a phone call to Laura. He also reads a notebook in which Peri recorded a fantasy involving talking dolls and a meeting with a powerful man who vows he's loved her for thousands of years. Ian then interviews Hugh, whose story is as bizarre as Peri's fantasy. On the night she disappeared, Hugh says, he played chess in a basement nightclub with a strange, charismatic man, a man who claimed to have won Peri from him. In the morning, the club had vanished. Ian recognizes both Peri's and Hugh's stories as analogues of the Celtic legend of Etain and Mither, in which a prince of the Sidhe abducts a mortal woman. As we gradually learn, Ian has previously investigated a similar abduction and rescued a young woman lost on a fairy hill in Scotland. Ian manages to convince Laura and Hugh that his interpretation of Peri's disappearance is the most likely, and the three of them travel to Scotland to try to recover the missing girl. Tuttle builds the story convincingly, shifting easily betweenmodern-day London and old folk-tales of fairy abductions that foreshadow the plot. Stylishly written, with evocative use of folklore elements. Agent: Howard Morhaim/Howard Morhaim Literary Agency

Book Details

Published
June 18, 2026
Publisher
Random House Publishing Group
Pages
384
Format
Paperback
ISBN
9780553587340

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