Mystery Lover...but overall a very eclectic reader. Will read everything from the classics to historical fiction. Biography to essays. Not into horror or much into YA. If you would like me to review a book, then please see my stated review policy BEFORE emailing me. Please Note: This is a book blog. It is not a platform for advertising. Please do NOT contact me to ask that I promote your NON-book websites or products. Thank you.
Pages
Saturday, August 31, 2013
Rules of Murder: Review
Rules of Murder is set in 1930s Britain. Most of the action takes place at a country house, complete with country house party and a corpse in the greenhouse. The corpse is one David Lincoln--a slimy, blackmailing cad who probably deserved what he got, but hopefully not from Drew Farthering's mother or step-father. Before long the country house grounds are littered with bodies. Drew, his life-long chum Nick Dennison (boon companion and son of the butler), and the lovely Madeleine Parker (niece to Drew's step-father) are soon on the case--trying to prove that Drew's mother didn't commit suicide and his step-father didn't commit murder...among other crimes.
This is a fabulous first entry into a new series that brings back all the fun and feel of the Golden Age of mystery. Agatha Christie and Dorothy L. Sayers would definitely approve of the obvious homage paid to the classic tales of detection. The characters are just right for the period and Drew Farthering is an absolute charmer. There is romance and humor and plenty of amateur detection. Farthington and friends make all sorts of mistakes on the way to the solution--and the police are good, solid investigators (not the bumblers that often appear in vintage novels). I look forward to future installments and am interested to see what Deering does by way of an encore in Death by the Book (due out in 2014) after this four-star beginning.
[Disclaimer: My review policy is posted on my blog, but just to reiterate...I won this review copy through a GoodReads First Reads Give-Away and it was sent to me by Bethany House, the publisher. The book was offered to me for impartial review and I have received no payment of any kind. All comments are entirely my own honest opinion.]
5 comments:
Sorry folks, but I have been getting an incredible amount of spam. I have adjusted my settings and all messages will be moderated from now on. If that does not take care of the problem then I will have to go to the "Prove You're Not a Robot" thing--which I hate as much as you do.
If your name does not appear automatically, please tell me your name in the comment. Otherwise you will just show up as "Unknown." Thanks!
Sounds fun! I love Golden Age mysteries :)
ReplyDeleteThis sounds like an absolute intriguing read. Just added it to my wish list. Great review!
ReplyDeleteKimberlee
www.girllostinabook.com
girllostinabook@hotmail.com
Josef Sckvorecky wrote a series of detective short stories that each break one of Knox's rules, called "Sins for Father Knox".
ReplyDelete@nigel.holmes: Yes, he did. I read those back before my blogging days, so I don't have a real review--just a star rating. I'm afraid I didn't care for them much. I gave the collection two stars.
ReplyDeleteThis sounds like a lot of fun.... I have to be on the lookout for it.
ReplyDelete