This book is the Seventh in the series featuring Mrs. Murphy, a Grey tiger short-hair cat who, along with a Welsh corgi dog named Tee Tucker, solves mysteries with the assistance of Mary Minor Haristeen, the young Postmistress of the small town of Crozet, Virginia, some ten miles west of Charlottesville. (It should be noted that all animals can talk to each other, and that they all understand humans, but humans, being dense imperfect beings, cannot understand the animals.) And these are fun mysteries to read.
In this book, a Civil War Reenactment is taking place, to the bemusement of Harry Haristeen, who does not see the point in rich white people dressing up to reenact battles of a war that was lost. Among the rich white people taking part are Tommy Van Allen (who is actually not at the event, as he and his plane are missing, though Mrs. Murphy knows that it is in old Tally Urquhart’s unused barn), Sir H. Vane Tempest, an Englishman who is richer than Midas, his young beautiful wife Sarah Vane, Blair Bainbridge, Harry’s friend and neighbor who is a male model in New York, and Archie Ingram, who is a county commissioner who is not rich, but who has influence when he is not pitching fits. At the reenactment Sir H. is shot in the back but survives, and Sarah is going all over town accusing Archie Ingram of having done the deed. Mrs. Murphy, Tucker, and their friend Pewter (a grey overweight cat) think this all has to do with plans for the new reservoir, as persons unknown seem to be buying up a lot of property in the county. This book ended a bit unsatisfactorily, as while we have dead and injured bodies littering the stage, the actual villain appears to not be brought to justice.
I will now begin reading the next book in the series, and I mildly hope that the dangling ends left at the end of this book eventually get resolved.