A Lady Eleanor Swift Mystery #15
363 pages
Publisher: Bookouture
Release Date: September 27, 2023
Netgalley
Blurb
Lady Swift has been cordially invited to a huge royal celebration in Little Buckford to toast the King’s birthday… but wait, is that a body in the village hall?
Lady Eleanor Swift and her loyal butler Clifford are busy lending a hand with
preparations for the big day. The grand dining room at Henley Hall is
overflowing with home-sewn flags, paint and royal rosettes. Even Gladstone the
bulldog and his new friend Tomkins the ginger cat are invited!
But just days before the event Mr Prestwick-Peterson, the chairman of the
celebrations committee, is found dead in the village strangled with handmade
red, white and royal blue bunting.
With the village hall in total disarray and a key part of the decorations
missing, Eleanor wonders if someone dastardly is sabotaging the King’s birthday
celebrations? Teaming up with her handsome beau Detective Hugh Seldon to
question the local butcher, baker, and pub landlord it becomes clear that the
meddlesome busybody Mr Prestwick-Peterson was not universally liked in charming
Little Buckford. Indeed, the only mystery is why he wasn’t murdered before…
Searching Mr Prestwick-Peterson’s pristinely organised rooms, Eleanor is
surprised to find a faded photograph of a beautiful young woman hidden within
the pages of a novel. Could this be the key to untangling this very village
murder? And can Eleanor catch the killer before the party is over for her, too?
Review
I have to start this review with a disclaimer: I did not read the 14 preceding Lady Eleanor Swift mysteries. Fortunately, I can also state that this did not leave me confused and that it didn’t affect my enjoyment of this story at all.
Quite the opposite in fact. There’s a lot to enjoy in this charming story. The characters and the interactions between them are vivid, interesting, and at times chuckle-worthy. The exchanges between Lady Eleanor and Clifford, her butler, are especially delightful. Just as those between Eleanor and her fiancé Detective Hugh Seldon often made me smile. Overall, I can honestly say there wasn’t a boring or superfluous character in this story, and that includes Gladstone the bulldog and Tomkins, the cat.
The mystery in this book was intriguing and well-plotted. The murder of a man universally disliked is always a great set-up and the fact that every possible suspect had the same, impossible to disprove, alibi, added greatly to the intrigue. When a second murder victim is discovered, the urgency of the investigation increases, especially since it is only days until the festivities to celebrate the King’s birthday are to take place. The solution surprised me, although I realised after I had it all spelled out for me that the clues I needed to figure it out for myself were all there. 😊
The one thing I found less charming was the thriller aspect near the end of the story. I don’t object to it being there, it just felt a bit (too) long in what was otherwise a delightful cozy mystery. Having said that, I can’t say it bothered me enough to put me off Lady Eleanor and I can definitely see myself reading other books in this series in the future.
To summarize: Murder by Invitation is a smoothly written, captivating cozy mystery featuring delightful characters and a well-plotted mystery.