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Mrs. Malory Mysteries #20

Mrs. Malory and a Necessary End

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When Sheila Malory fills in for a friend at a local charity shop in the quiet English town of Taviscombe, she's happy for the change of scene. It will give her a chance to deal with interesting books, meet new people, and above all, work for a good cause! Still, not everything at the shop is so appealing. The ill-tempered, officious store supervisor, Desmond Barlow, runs the shop as a tyrant.

That is, until Desmond is found stabbed to death in the shop, and Mrs. Malory puts her impeccable sleuthing skills into play. Unfortunately, it seems that Desmond was disliked by pretty much everyone. In a town full of suspects, Mrs. Malory must go behind closed doors and delve into a slew of small-town secrets if she wants to discover a killer who is far from charitable...

256 pages, Mass Market Paperback

First published May 1, 2012

19 people are currently reading
182 people want to read

About the author

Hazel Holt

57 books72 followers
Hazel Holt is a British novelist. She studied at King Edward VI High School for Girls in Birmingham, England, and then Newnham College, Cambridge. She went on to work at the International African Institute in London, where she became acquainted with the novelist Barbara Pym, whose biography she later wrote. She also finished one of Pym's novels after Pym died.

Holt wrote her first novel in her sixties, and is a leading crime novelist. She is best known for her "Sheila Malory" series. Her son is the novelist Tom Holt.

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5 stars
78 (24%)
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109 (33%)
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110 (34%)
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19 (5%)
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6 (1%)
Displaying 1 - 30 of 50 reviews
Profile Image for Damaskcat.
1,782 reviews4 followers
April 17, 2017
Sheila Malory allows herself to be persuaded to stand in for a friend for a few weeks at a local charity shop. Here she meets the unpleasant Desmond Barlow and his downtrodden wife, Wendy. Desmond, among his many community activities manages the charity shop and is forever criticising everyone else. His wife and son are completely dominated by him and everyone else is either slightly scared of him or permanently angry at him. When Desmond is found dead in the shop one morning there are plenty of suspects.

Sheila is puzzled by the reactions of several of her co-workers to the death and finds herself acting as unofficial helper to the Inspector investigating the case. Many people have means, motive and opportunity not least the victim's own family and there are times when many people involved think the murderer did the community a service by eliminating Desmond.

I enjoy Hazel Holt's low key writing and the interesting characters she creates for her cosy mysteries. Sheila herself is well drawn and she doesn't always behave how she should or how she is expected to behave. She has an advantage in that people will talk to her where they might not talk to the police. I particularly like the two animals in the story - the dog Triss who is always in the wars and the Siamese cat with attitude called Foss. If you like your crime stories without graphic violence then give this series a try. They can be read in any order.
Profile Image for Jeanette.
4,104 reviews842 followers
February 27, 2014
So we come to the end of the Mrs. Malory's series with the final line in this novel being a wife's put-down re her husband's failed suicide attempt. Repeated in gossip by a policeman friend. Village style. This particular plot is not up to the usual par, but Mrs. Dudley has tea so it is forgiven.

Looking back on these little books that entertain us with Taviscombe by the sea, I have a singular thought beyond the characters and the sleuthing gossip. And that is that I can not remember any other such realistic fare of thoughts upon keeping a "house". For instance, how you eventually have to spend an hour or two cleaning out a medicine cabinet or a back closet, or even the kitchen cabinet that holds all the old and misused pots and pans. Or perhaps to find that odd clipper or screw jar lid for the jam set. That kind of thing. Wondering why the lint in the dryer is usually dark or grey! The mundane of housework arts and every day maintenance- prime and precious, to me, in these Hazel Holt Sheila Malory novels. Joy in small tasks and in the serenity of physical comfort and structure in snug home. Vastly overlooked in printed material of any length, for sure.
Profile Image for Sheila Samuelson .
1,206 reviews25 followers
September 14, 2020
Rating: 5 Stars!! (Wish i could rate it 10 Stars!!)
Review:
I wasnt sure what to expect since this was my first time reading a Cozy Mystery by this author but i loved this book so much!!

This book was about Sheila Malory filling in for her friend at a bookstore and all goes well til a store supervisor goes off on a tyrant in the bookstore and than is found murdered a day later so Mrs Malory has to put her sleuthing skills to the test to find out who murdered the supervisor.

The Storyline and Characters were so fun and easy to get into with many funny things happening!! Can't wait to read more by this author in the future!!!
1,851 reviews19 followers
February 20, 2018
Cozy British village mystery featuring amateur sleuth Mrs. Malory. Sort of a gentle comforting old fashioned read.
5,967 reviews67 followers
August 14, 2013
Sheila Malory can't say no to people, which is how she finds herself filling in for a friend at the charity resale shop. Actually, it is pleasant work--except for two bossy newcomers, Norma and her bete noir Desmond. When there's a murder, a number of people are suspects, but nobody would kill just because of someone's minor personality flaws! Sheila doesn't detect, exactly, but she knows the people in her little town, she talks, she offers and drinks cups of tea, and somehow things gradually become more clear. For cozy fans.
Profile Image for Alison C.
1,455 reviews18 followers
August 29, 2022
Sheila Malory’s friend Monica asks Sheila to take over her volunteer job at a local charity shop three days a week while Monica attends to her daughter, a new mother in need of help. Sheila is happy to do so, until she runs across both Desmond Barlow and Norma Stanley. He is an officious and patronizing oaf, and she is intent on taking over the social world of Taviscombe despite being an off-comer who has only lived there for a little while. Nobody is too upset when Desmond is murdered in the shop one night, not even his very passive wife Wendy, but Sheila is nonetheless curious about the death, because there are quite a few people in the town with whom he had clashed. And Norma is suddenly acting very strangely, abandoning her commitments and generally not responding in her usual high-handed manner to any slight transgression…. This is the 19th story in this series, and it provides an interesting viewpoint with respect to how small towns are run on charitable work and by committee. I especially like how Sheila interacts with the more aggressive characters in her town - basically, she proffers a pleasant facade and mild agreement, then goes her own way. Which is, of course, about the only way to deal with those people who think it proper to take over your life for you! These books do not really need to be read in sequence, although some readers new to the series might take a while to sort out the various well-established relationships; generally, the fun of the series lies in its cozy attributes, each being a quick and satisfying read; recommended.
Profile Image for Kate.
2,334 reviews1 follower
October 4, 2024
"When Sheila Malory fills in for a friend at a local charity shop in the quiet English town of Taviscombe, she's happy for the change of scene. It will give her a chance to deal with interesting books, meet new people, and above all, work for a good cause! Still, not everything at the shop is so appealing. The ill-tempered, officious store supervisor, Desmond Barlow, runs the shop as a tyrant.

"That is, until Desmond is found stabbed to death in the shop, and Mrs. Malory puts her impeccable sleuthing skills into play. Unfortunately, it seems that Desmond was disliked by pretty much everyone. In a town full of suspects, Mrs. Malory must go behind closed doors and delve into a slew of small-town secrets if she wants to discover a killer who is far from charitable..."
~~back cover

THAT person did it? But that person is a minor character, completely overshadowed by the rest of the cast of characters, all of whom had such incriminating motives to see old Desmond off. There's his meek, browbeaten little wife, his meek, browbeaten son, the charity shop manager and various other folk around town that Desmond has alienated by his bullying ways. A thoroughly unlikeable man, whom no one will miss in the slightest.

The murderer revealed comes as a complete surprise. There were no clues -- well, a few at the very end, but they all pointed to someone else. And Mrs. Malory only uncovers the truth by a fluke.
1,149 reviews5 followers
June 2, 2018
I enjoy Mrs. Malory. This is the 13th book in the series I’ve read so far. They do not have to be read in order so I pick one up as I can. Mrs. Malory, a middle-aged widow is very active in her little English town of Taviscombe. Now she is helping out at a charity shop while a friend is away. The Manager of the shop, Desmond Barlow, runs things in a very dictatorial way. This does not sit well with the ladies who volunteer their time there, – that is until he is found dead in the backroom with a knife in his back. --- One good thing about Mrs. Malory – she does not see herself as a detective. She thinks about things and looks for information, but then passes everything along to the police – who usually appreciate her help.
1,086 reviews
March 13, 2017
Good, solid British cozy mystery...you can count on Hazel Holt to deliver!
Sheila Malory ( a sort of Typhoid Mary of murder) subs for a friend in a local charity shop when the unlikable manager is killed. Several suspects, but I caught the connecting link the first time it was mentioned long before the murder even occurred! In fact, the realization of who the murderer really is a long-drawn-out business, by which time, the reader begins to wonder if it might actually be someone else instead! So, not much in the suspense category, but Hazel gets her settings, people, language and "English" details pitch perfect, making for a relaxing and satisfactory read.
Profile Image for Nancy.
1,428 reviews49 followers
January 2, 2026
There are times when I crave the descriptions of the mundane life Mrs. Malory lives. Of course between descriptions of her cat knocking something off the shelf and taking her granddaughter to ballet lessons, there is always a murder. This week I was lucky to find two Mrs. Malory books I hadn't read at our local St Vincent de Paul. That was a perfect link to a mystery around a murder that takes place in a charity shop.
390 reviews
March 17, 2018
Mrs Mallory helps out in a local charity shop for a friend and, although she is looking fwd to this, finds things not as straightforward as they first seem. The bad tempered, officious store supervisor is found stabbed to death and, as everybody seemed to dislike this man it means a lot of suspects are involved.
Profile Image for Joan Colby.
Author 48 books71 followers
January 21, 2020
Just okay. Many of these series, it seems, top-out with the third to tenth book. The first couple shows the writer learning with training wheels, then she hits her pace and rides off confidently. Toward the end, boredom or age catches up with her and she begins to wobble or take the easy comfortable well-trodden path to an unsurprising conclusion.
691 reviews
January 30, 2020
An older British woman in a small town volunteers at a charity thrift shop, only to be questioned by police after the man who runs the shop is found dead.
This was given to me as a good example of a British village cozy. While it read OK at first, it lost my interest. And while I didn't guess the reason for the killing, I guessed the killer, which takes something away from it for me.
Profile Image for Tanya.
859 reviews18 followers
September 24, 2018
Mrs. Malory helps out in a charity shop for a month and the boss ends up dead in the back room one night. Another good mystery filled with suspicious characters and funny remarks. The last page!! Too funny.
Profile Image for Larry.
3,076 reviews18 followers
November 2, 2019
This is a good story, well written except for the end. I was dissatisfied with the explanation of who and why. BUT I suspect my opinion is in the minority. Regardless, I do recommend your reading the book because it is well written.
Profile Image for Carole.
1,631 reviews
May 14, 2020
Mrs. Malory gets roped into helping out at the charity shop temporarily by a friend who had to go out of town and wouldn't be able to fulfill her duties at the shop. Working there is okay, except for the two domineering people who are in charge, until one of them is murdered.
387 reviews2 followers
February 3, 2019
I am getting to the end of this series. Boo hoo.
196 reviews
January 20, 2023
What a plethora of possible suspects! The end was a let-down, though, since both the identity and the motive were handed to Mrs. Malory on a silver platter.
Profile Image for Pamela Mclaren.
1,696 reviews116 followers
May 1, 2023
Sheila Malory takes a turn volunteering at a local charity shop and finds herself in the midst of a power struggle between store supervisor Desmond Barlow and Norma Stanley. Both Desmond and Norma want to be top dog in the charity shop and the tension is slowly building, making all the volunteers wish that one or both would step down. Instead there is a murder — Desmond is stabbed in the back storeroom of the shop.

And as usual Sheila Malory takes a turn at gathering clues and assisting the police. Making it all difficult is that many disliked the man, but was there someone who hated him enough to kill?

A pleasant, light cozy mystery to read. Mrs. Malory is an enjoyable amateur sleuth who somehow knows or soon gets to know everyone involved and always manages to put the clues together.
412 reviews
March 11, 2017
I had a withdrawn library copy of this book and took it on holiday. It was an easy read beside the pool. I understand it is the last in the series. I've enjoyed many titles in this cozy series.
Profile Image for Clare O'Beara.
Author 25 books372 followers
May 4, 2015
This is a British cosy mystery set in a seaside town. I've read a couple from this series previously and been underwhelmed, mainly because of the writing style and obsession with short-sighted minutiae. This may be typical of the narrator and other people may of course enjoy it more than I did. Some of the minutiae of daily life is good to include, and brings a female viewpoint, such as decluttering a kitchen. Too much just feels like padding.

The story revolves around a charity shop. No descriptive passages whatsoever are given to us. The author just decides that we can each make up our own minds about what the shop looks like. I would want to know if it was next to a supermarket and crowded café, or among a clutter of derelict shop fronts, or something in between. I'd like to see some colours and smell some scents, but just about everything occurs in black and white, even a bunch of freesias. I'd wonder why the town population is so homogenous, no Polish plumbers or Italian chippers or Chinese or African restaurateurs.

I'd be amazed at the apparent total lack of street cameras, bus cameras and shop closed-circuit cameras, which mean that even in 2012 the local police have to rely on an elderly lady who sits at her window (how is her sight?) to know who came and went. Especially since Britain is the country most densely covered in cameras in the world.

The actual mystery is fine, and it's quite fun that a few people came and went from the shop despite the victim being dead in the place. But the story does drag in the middle as apparently nothing happens except a few conversations to work in more suspects. Once it picks up in the final quarter the life returns and we can have fun picking our own favourite motive.

I would like more description and action instead of a book composed of conversation, but the writer is happy with her style and of course that is up to her.
Profile Image for Suspense Magazine.
569 reviews90 followers
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February 19, 2013
Mrs. Malory and a Necessary End
By Hazel Holt
Sheila Malory, where have you been all my life? “Mrs. Malory and a Necessary End” is the eighteenth in this delightful series by British author Hazel Holt. And yes, I admit it. This is the first one I’ve ever read. Sheila Malory is a woman of a certain age, widowed, and living in the English town of Taviscombe, which appears to be a quiet, peaceful place. When Mrs. Malory is asked to fill in at a local charity shop for a friend, she’s glad to do it. A chance to make new friends, broaden her horizons, and get first dibs on all those bargains. Volunteering at the shop doesn’t turn out to be quite as much fun as Mrs. Malory expects, however, since the store supervisor, Desmond Barlow, runs the place like a tyrant, and often crosses swords with the other volunteers, one of whom is his long-suffering wife. When Desmond is found stabbed to death in the shop, it’s impossible to narrow down the list of suspects since he was universally disliked by the entire town. When his widow quickly puts their house on the market and leaves town, she jumps to the top of the police suspect list. But Mrs. Malory has a few other ideas.

“Mrs. Malory and a Necessary End” may be my first read in this series, but the other seventeen are now at the top of my list!
Profile Image for Debbie.
3,638 reviews88 followers
September 25, 2012
"Mrs. Malory and a Necessary End" is a cozy mystery. This book is the 20th in the series. You don't need to read the previous novels to enjoy this one, and the answers to previous mysteries were not discussed in this one. However, the author did assume that the readers already knew the reoccurring characters and how they were related to Mrs. Malory. This information usually wasn't given when the characters were introduced, yet it became more clear as the story went on.

The story was very fast paced. Each scene focused on adding more clues about the mystery and was mainly dialogue. The descriptions (setting, job, characters, etc.) were brief unless more description was needed to understand and solve the mystery.

The whodunit in this puzzle-mystery was guessable but not obvious. I liked how Mrs. Malory picked up important information simply by her willingness to listen to people talk, that she encouraged them to give this information to the police, and the mutual respect between her and the detective on the case.

There was no sex. There was a very minor amount of explicit bad language. Overall, I'd recommend this novel to those who enjoy puzzle-mystery whodunits.

I received this book as a review copy from the publisher.
Profile Image for Brenda at MyShelf.
88 reviews
October 8, 2012
In this mystery best friend Rosemary takes a back seat. Rosemary resents Sheila joining Monica at a charity shop and tells Sheila she’ll regret it. Sheila actually finds a sense of purpose in working with the other ladies. But Desmond, the charity tyrant, is another matter. It’s through the gossip mill Sheila discovers what an abrasive, controlling man Desmond can be. Most tolerate him and go about their business until one day Desmond is found stabbed to death in the charity closet.

This is Amateur sleuth Sheila Malory’s twentieth mystery. I have to put the longevity of it down to a strong lead character and the author’s ability to make a reader feel he/she is taking part in solving a crime. A very good mystery
Profile Image for Gloria Mccracken.
634 reviews1 follower
February 3, 2016
Good old Mrs. Malory. Even when she tries, she can't seem to keep her nose out of little mysteries around her English village. And if she does try, there is her friend Rosemary (and Rosemary's mother, a terminal termagant and inveterate gossip monger) to urge her on. Some of these little mysteries --twenty or so in the series so far -- stem from or result in murders. So there you are: another classic village murder mystery in the vein of Agatha Christie's Miss Marple, only much better written and with a much less fluffy heroine. No need to read these in order, particularly, but, as always, the continuing characters come into better focus if you do.
Profile Image for Deb.
1,077 reviews
February 3, 2013
Next in the series. Man who runs a charity shop in town that Mrs. Malory works part-time is gets murdered. Since the man and his wife are newcomers to the village, the investigation into who they both are and why did they move into the village. Why is the wife so docile and the son such a wimp. The woman that took over the shop....another newcomer...what is her story? This is a slow-moving mystery as Hazel Holt mysteries are usually written. I happen to need this type of mystery every once in awhile so enjoy her writing.
Profile Image for MaureenAnn.
133 reviews3 followers
March 1, 2014
I enjoyed this book as a quick cosy mystery. Hazel Holt describes the world of small town gossip of charity shop volunteers and committee-post holders in a very realistic way. Although I enjoy the details of Mrs Malory's domestic life, I agree with another reviewer who commented that there is too much cat and dog-feeding detail in this book. I feel that it has been used to pad out the book and detracts somewhat from the main murder plot and characterisation of the town residents.
Displaying 1 - 30 of 50 reviews

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