Arts & Culture
Book Review: Lady in the Lake
Laura Lippman's novel turns back the clock to 1960s Baltimore, when the body of African-American barmaid Shirley Parker was found in Druid Park Lake.
In her latest, Laura Lippman turns back the clock to 1960s Baltimore, drawing inspiration from the city’s real-life “Lady in the Lake,” the body of a woman that was found in Druid Park Lake in 1969 and identified as Shirley Parker, an African-American barmaid.
In Lippman’s fictional retelling of the eerie story, Cleo Sherwood, a bartender at the Flamingo club on Pennsylvania Avenue, goes missing on New Year’s Eve. No one seems to care except Maddie Schwartz, who recently separated from her husband and became a reporter for the Star, determined to solve this mystery by whatever means necessary.
Scattered throughout the story are first-person perspectives of various characters who meet Maddie along the way. It’s perfect beach reading material—light and breezy and full of juicy gossip, set in historical Baltimore (think pre-gentrification Inner Harbor and a buzzing Howard Street shopping district), with fun twists throughout.
Editor’s Note: 7/19/2024
The television series based on Lippman’s novel debuts today on Apple TV. The show, which was filmed in Baltimore, stars Natalie Portman as Maddie Schwartz and Charm City native actress Moses Ingram as Cleo Johnson—the character inspired by Parker.