Murder comes to call

Jessica Ellicott

Book - 2020

When a judge who recently ruled on her reckless motoring case is found dead in what appears to be a burglary gone wrong, adventuress Beryl and her no-nonsense partner, Edwina, search for clues to prove a gardener's innocence.

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Subjects
Genres
Detective and mystery fiction
Historical fiction
Novels
Published
New York, NY : Kensington Books 2020.
Language
English
Main Author
Jessica Ellicott (author)
Edition
First Kensington hardcover edition
Item Description
Sequel to: Murder cuts the mustard.
Physical Description
282 pages ; 22 cm
ISBN
9781496724847
Contents unavailable.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

In Ellicott's diverting fourth mystery set in the post--WWI English village of Walmsley Parva (after 2019's Murder Cuts the Mustard), glamorous American Beryl Helliwell and her practical British friend, Edwina Davenport, stumble across the body of Gordon Faraday, an unpopular local magistrate, at the foot of his staircase. The fledgling private inquiry agents find no shortage of potential perpetrators, including Faraday's widow and stepdaughter, who seem relieved at his death; his half-brother, who has a history of gambling and family estrangement; and an indigent Irish laborer who faces a jail sentence if he does not pay a fine. Faraday also may have surprised a burglar, as a rash of peculiar thefts has occurred in the village, including the snatching of completed census forms. Beryl and Edwina juggle the questioning of suspects, pumping of local gossips, hunting for the missing census materials, and jousting with their nemesis, Constable Doris Gibbs. This is a treat for readers who enjoy following the adventures of disparate yet complementary sleuths. Agent: John Talbot, Talbot Fortune Agency. (Nov.)

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Review by Kirkus Book Review

An upcoming census upends life in the quiet village of Walmsley Parva. As conventional English ladies will, Edwina Davenport frets endlessly about how to report her unconventional household on her census form. It's bad enough that she shares her ancestral home, The Beeches, with Beryl Helliwell, an American aviatrix and world traveler. Worse, since Helliwell and Davenport, the inquiry agency she and Beryl run, is barely solvent, the two women rely on subsidies from their gardener, Simpkins, who inherited a fortune from the Colonel Kimberly's Condiment Company. In recognition of his contribution to the household economy, Beryl installs the irascible and often intoxicated Simpkins in a back bedroom. As Edwina wonders how to describe their platonic ménage-a-trois on their census form, new challenges arise. Soon after Beryl persuades the aging Simpkins to subcontract the physical work of gardening to Irish immigrant Declan O'Shea, O'Shea falls under suspicion of murdering village magistrate Gordon Faraday, who sentenced him to a whopping fine for disorderly conduct. While Edwina and Beryl are trying informally to clear their undergardener, someone steals the messenger bag containing all of Walmsley Parva's census forms. Fearing reprisals from the pro-union, anti-government Triple Alliance, census officer Gerald Melton hires Helliwell and Davenport to discover the thief. Now Edwina faces an ethical challenge: How hard should she try to recover a set of documents she'd just as soon leave missing? In this clash between conscience and convention, hilarity wins. Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.