It's good to see Rickman's Merrily Watkins return, this time in a mystery that centres on the second hand book capital of the UK, Hay-on-Wye. (The self-referentiality of a supernatural mystery, about books and Hay, written by an author and broadcaster with links to Hay, only adds to the thrill - it's geneuinely difficult to be sure what is real and what is made up here, adding to the atmosphere and the plausibility).
In this book, Merrily is supposedly on holiday. Jane is away on a dig. Lol is off on tour. Even Gomer Parry only makes brief appearances. The Revd Watkins is pretty much alone, when Frannie Bliss calls to ask her advice about a suspicious drowning.
At the same time, Robin and Betty Thoroughgood (who you may remember from A Crown of Lights) are trying to make a new start, setting up an esoteric bookshop in Hay. The shop they choose has a... peculiar... atmosphere, leading them to begin enquiries about its history and previous owners. That atmosphere, and what they discover, seems at odds with the general bookishness of Hay. Could there be a struggle going on for the future of the town - and if so, how does that link to the death Frannie is looking into - of a man regarded locally as a wizard?
The story just tumbles out, eventually involving disappearances, deaths, a vist to Hay by a hippy convoy in the 80s, crazed far right cultists, and a crowd of old friends who have appeared in previous Watkins mysteries. There are many threads in the plot, and a good tip would be to keep careful track of the names, if you want to spot the villain in time. It's great entertainment and time spent with Ms Watkins is never wasted. However I didn't feel it was the very based of the Merrily stories. The absence of Jane and Lol leaves a gap, as does the fact that much of the story - and really all the plot - takes place away from Ledwardine, and doesn't involve Merrily directly (true, a subplot does).
Over the course of the now 12 books, I've built up a sense that there are still mysteries in Ledwardine and I want to see Merrily solving them, assisted (or hampered!) by the usual gang, while trying to keep her parish going. (Full disclosure: my wife is a vicar in the Church of England, so I may be a bit of a nerd on some of this - though not the deliverance stuff!) I think this is really Frannie's book, and while he's a great character, I want more Merrily.
So four, not five, stars - but it's still a great read - especially the relentless conclusion.