Update Nov 2019
Another charming Daisy Dalrymple mystery. It starts with Daisy investigating Poison Pen letters in a small village, on behalf of her brother-in-law. He’s not the only one receiving the letters, but before Daisy figures out who else has been getting them and who is writing them, the foul letters escalate to murder, and the police gets involved.
The story starts slowly, but after the murder, it speeds up nicely, although I feel that many characters were not as well-defined as in other Dunn’s books. Maybe there were just too many of them.
What I find interesting is that so many citizens of a small somnolent village have something shameful in their past or present, something they desperately want to conceal, which the letter writer tries to expose. We’re all human after all, aren’t we? I suppose, any place where more than one person lives wouldn’t be as peaceful as it seems on the surface.
Review May 2012
I can always rely on Daisy Dalrymple to be the heroine of an enjoyable book. Dunn writes with such panache as if she peeked into her chosen time and place, England in the 1920s, through some magical lens, and then told the story the way it should be told in the 21st century. The blend of cozy historical mystery, modern writer's skills, a charming protagonist, and faint nostalgia for the England long gone makes a very satisfying read.