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Special Challenge—and Pleasure

R.J. Koreto Author Interview

In The Cadieux Murders, an architect hired to renovate a mansion soon finds her work opens the door to a long-buried murder mystery. Where did the idea for this novel come from?

I edit a real estate newsletter and found out that if you own a landmark home, you have to call in a specially certified architect to make any changes. I thought, what a great idea—to have such an architect find mysteries in the historic homes she works on! And I’ve always loved old homes: My wife and I live in an 1850 farmhouse and love its quirks.

What was the hardest part about writing a mystery story; where you constantly have to give just enough to keep the mystery alive until the big reveal?

That’s the trick! You want to give readers enough information so they feel they can solve it. The ending should be a surprise but can’t be out of left field. That is, the reader must say “Aha! They were leading up to this!” Consider Murder on the Orient Express. No one combined hints with a final surprise better than Agatha Christie.

Which character in the novel do you feel you relate to more and why?

Wren Fontaine, my architect/sleuth, seems different from me in many ways: she’s a woman and I’m a man. She’s an architect and I have a weak visual sense. She is gay and I am straight. And yet, she’s the protagonist most like me. Wren and I share a difficulty relating to people. Our personalities and ways of coping are very similar. Bringing her to life was a special challenge—and pleasure.

Can we look forward to another installment in the Historic Homes Mystery series?

I’m working on one now with Wren returning to her difficult high school years—transforming a long-closed dormitory for modern use for foreign visiting students. Can she rebuild the dorm, solve a long-ago murder, and work with her former bully?

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The ink is still wet on the contract, but Wren Fontaine is already running into trouble as she renovates Cadieux House, a modernist masterpiece on Long Island’s exclusive Gold Coast. The home’s architect was the brilliant and eccentric Marius Cadieux, her father’s mentor, and Ezra doesn’t want Wren to change as much as a doorknob.

And the home itself comes with a dark past: In 1955, it was the site of the never-solved murder of its owner, Dennis Blaine. Cadieux himself was alleged to be having an affair with Dennis’s wife, the stunningly beautiful Rebecca. It seems like yesterday’s headlines, but then someone starts killing people with a connection to the house. The home’s new owner—bestselling novelist Bronwyn Merrick—may be using the house to launch a fictionalized account of the 1955 crime. But someone may not want her to. Just how far will Bronwyn’s armed bodyguard go to protect her?

As Wren untangles the threads, she finds they all lead back to the house. Rebecca apparently inspired the strange, yet alluring residence, and both the home and its mistress may have caused uncontrolled emotions that led to tragedy. Wren uses all her architectural skills to decipher the hidden message Cadieux cunningly wove into the home’s design. She must think back 20 years to when, as a little girl, she met Cadieux. Deeply impressed with Wren, he gave her a clue about the house—and his unusual friendship with Rebecca. With her girlfriend Hadley at her side, Wren eventually solves the mysteries of the home and the people who lived there, develops a grudging respect for modernist architecture—and learns something about the difference between love and obsession.

The Cadieux Murders

The Cadieux Murders, by R.J. Koreto, offers a riveting historical mystery wrapped in family secrets and architectural intrigue. At its heart is Wren Fontaine, a meticulous architect hired to renovate the enigmatic Cadieux House. This alluring mansion, steeped in history, was built in the 19th century by Marius Cadieux as a grand gift for Rebecca Blaine. But its charm hides a shadowy past. The unsolved murder of Rebecca’s husband, Dennis, in 1955 still lingers in the air, with whispers of an affair between Cadieux and Rebecca casting further doubt. Wren’s renovation work becomes a journey into this unresolved mystery, complicated by fresh deaths that seem inextricably linked to the house’s troubled history.

The novel masterfully weaves its historical threads with the present, delivering a story as layered as the mansion itself. Wren Fontaine, a socially awkward yet fiercely dedicated architect, shines as the protagonist. Her relationship with her father, Ezra, adds tension; he disapproves of any changes she might impose on his mentor’s creation. Yet, Wren’s journey isn’t solely about uncovering the truth of the house—it’s about discovering her own capacity for connection. Her relationship with Hadley offers her the emotional grounding necessary to navigate the tangled web of human stories tied to the Cadieux House.

Koreto’s meticulous attention to detail brings the Cadieux House to life. Its grandeur and mystery pulse through every page. The deeper Wren digs, the more elusive the truth becomes, as few who once lived in the house remain alive to tell their stories. New deaths add urgency, forcing her to confront a chilling possibility: the house itself may hold the answers to a mystery buried for decades. Koreto’s storytelling balances suspense with heart, immersing the reader in a world where architecture and human emotion intersect.

For lovers of historical mysteries, R.J. Koreto’s The Cadieux Murders delivers in spades. It is a tale of suspense, intricate plot twists, and the secrets that haunt both homes and the people tied to them. With its compelling narrative and haunting atmosphere, this book is a must-read for anyone intrigued by the interplay of history, murder, and the enduring pull of forgotten stories.

Pages: 285 | ASIN ‏ : ‎ B0DGRTWSBG

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The Cadieux Murders: Historic Homes Mysteries, Book 3

In the 1950s, the alluring Rebecca Blaine ruled Long Island’s Gold Coast from Cadieux House, a gift of love from the brilliant architect Marius Cadieux. Today, as architect Wren Fontaine restores the house, she becomes immersed in a seventy-five-year-old murder, as well as fresh killings that echo it. To make it even more complicated, Cadieux was an important mentor to Wren’s father, who isn’t happy about Wren “fixing” the home.

Wren must think back to her childhood, when the elderly Cadieux gave her a riddle about a love triangle. She knows she must solve it to understand the house—and stop the killings. And meanwhile, Rebecca and Cadieux haunt the house …

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