Review by Publisher's Weekly Review
Set in 1930, Brody's plodding 12th Kate Shackleton mystery (after 2019's The Body on the Train) takes private investigator Kate and her assistant, Jim Sykes, to the Yorkshire market town of Masham, where William Lofthouse, the owner of Barleycorn Brewery, needs her help. "You've a right good reputation for discretion, for tackling all sorts of tricky business," he tells her, and explains that there's "a bit of a muddle in the accounts." The capable Miss Crawford, William's secretary, gives Sykes the relevant documents to examine. When Miss Crawford is knocked off her bike by an automobile and killed instantly, Sykes is sure it was murder. Not much happens until a second death. Meanwhile, Ruth Parnaby, the company's wage clerk, is preparing to compete for the title of Brewery Queen of all Yorkshire. Ruth's travails and triumphs tend to overshadow the investigative work. Smooth prose and nice local color offset in part a less than scintillating plot. Series fans will best appreciate this installment. Agent: Rebecca Winfield, David Luxton Assoc. (Oct.)
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Review by Kirkus Book Review
A muddle at a Yorkshire brewery in 1930 forces two private detectives to venture above and beyond their normal activities. It's not immediately clear what William Lofthouse, owner of the Barleycorn Brewery, wants of Kate Shackleton. To be sure, his nephew James, groomed as his successor, has been away in Germany longer than he ought. What's really worrying William, though, is having the business in tiptop shape when James does return. To that end, he asks Kate's fellow detective Jim Sykes to come to the brewery and uncover the reasons for a lot of minor problems that add up to big trouble. The establishment is supporting wages clerk Ruth Parnaby, whose brother and troubled father also work there, in a Brewery Queen contest. William's secretary, Miss Crawford, knows everything there is to know about the business, but before she can disclose something important to William, she's run over and killed in a hit-and-run that's clearly no accident. Kate and Jim soon discover that someone's been working against the brewery's interests, and they fear that William will be shocked and disappointed. Taking over as mentor to Ruth after Miss Crawford's murder, Kate realizes that Ruth's mother has been hiding away from her husband for years in fear for her life. The murder of a second brewery employee starts to weave the strands that finally come together in a surprising denouement. Britain between the wars provides the backdrop for murder and an engrossing look at women's place in society. Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.
Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.