432 pages
Publisher:
HarperCollins
Release Date:
June 6, 2024
Blurb
It’s the opening night of The Manor, and no expense, small or large, has been spared. The infinity pool sparkles; crystal pouches for guests’ healing have been placed in the Seaside Cottages and Woodland Hutches; the “Manor Mule” cocktail (grapefruit, ginger, vodka, and a dash of CBD oil) is being poured with a heavy hand. Everyone is wearing linen.
And yet, just outside the Manor’s immaculately kept grounds, an ancient forest
bristles with secrets. The local community resents what they see as the Manor’s
intrusion into the local woods and attempts to privatize the beach, and small
skirmishes have erupted on the edges of the property between locals and the
staff. And the whispers keep coming, about an old piece of pagan folklore—it
must be folklore??—the Night Birds, an avenging force that can be called upon
to make right wrongs that elude the law. Though surely everything at the Manor
has been done above board.
On the Sunday morning of opening weekend, the local police are called. There’s
been a fire. A body’s been discovered. Something’s not right with the guests.
What happened on the grounds of the Manor the past 36 hours? And who—or what—is
the cause?
THE FOUNDER
THE HUSBAND
THE MYSTERY GUEST
THE KITCHEN HELP
Everyone has an agenda. Everyone has a past. But not everyone will survive…The
Midnight Feast.
Review
I guess it is safe to say that I’m a fan of Lucy Foley’s mystery-thrillers. I thoroughly enjoyed The Hunting Party, The Guest List, and The Paris Apartment. So when I had the opportunity to request a review copy of The Midnight Feast from Netgalley it only took me half a second to click that button. I did not regret that decision.
Just like those three previous titles, The Midnight Feast is a multi-layered and well-plotted mystery in which nobody and nothing is exactly who or what they appear to be.
The story is told through four narrators: the founder of the newly opened luxury resort and organiser of the midnight feast, her husband, a mystery guest, and the kitchen help. These four characters have very distinctive voices as they share their personal perspective on The Manor, past and present.
I rated the book 4.5 rather than 5 stars because too much of the story felt a little over the top to me. From Francesca’s esoteric musings to the total destruction of the Manor I would have preferred a more nuanced approach. On the other hand, I loved the author’s use of folklore and local myths and practices. These gave the story a somewhat magical feeling which only added to the thrill of reading a fast-paced and well-executed mystery. And there’s no denying that the story pulled me in from the start and didn’t release me until I reached the end. An end that kept on surprising me. Just when I thought that surely all the questions had been answered and all the mysteries solved, Lucy Foley managed to surprise me again and again.
Long review short: With The Midnight Feast, Lucy Foley has created yet another breathtaking mystery that only reveals the truth slowly and with a few misdirections along the way. The past and the present mirror each other as events that remained unresolved 15 years earlier finally come to a head. The use of local myth and folklore only adds to the mystery and the thrillerish vibe. This is a must read for everybody who enjoys a good and fascinating mystery.
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