Death returns to a Yorkshire village when a museum opens on the site of an unexplained murder/suicide where a renowned author killed his sister with an ax and shot himself.
Robert Barnard (born 23 November 1936) was an English crime writer, critic and lecturer.
Born in Essex, Barnard was educated at the Royal Grammar School in Colchester and at Balliol College in Oxford. His first crime novel, A Little Local Murder, was published in 1976. The novel was written while he was a lecturer at University of Tromsø in Norway. He has gone on to write more than 40 other books and numerous short stories.
Barnard has said that his favourite crime writer is Agatha Christie. In 1980 he published a critique of her work titled A Talent to Deceive: An Appreciation of Agatha Christie.
Barnard was awarded the Cartier Diamond Dagger in 2003 by the Crime Writers Association for a lifetime of achievement.
Under the pseudonym Bernard Bastable, Robert Barnard has published one standalone novel and three alternate history books starring Wolfgang Mozart as a detective, he having survived to old age.
I like the character of Charlie Peace and enjoyed this next installment in the series, as he is sent by Scotland Yard to a literary conference where some dodgy scams might be in the works. An intrigue involving manuscripts of the late author Susannah Sneddon's novels ensues, as well as a murder. There's a lot of humor, particularly from Lettie Farraday, a seventy-ish widow returning to her native English village from her home in the U.S. who develops a maternal fondness for Charlie, which he reciprocates. Their friendship is charming and adds considerably to the story; she's almost a sidekick for him. Lots of skillfully dropped clues, but I didn't guess the murderer. I find Barnard's books slightly too cozy for my taste, but I keep reading them, so there's that! He does a great job of plotting and developing the atmosphere of the rural village as well as the characters therein.
I needed books to read myself to sleep, nothing too challenging or compelling or thrilling, which sounds a bit harsh now I say it, but a peaceful murder mystery with a decently sketched detective in 90s Northern England was just the ticket. Not earth shattering but enjoyable enough.
It’s always a treat to read a Robert Barnard book. Barnard has combined a literary mystery along with a murder (past & present) and made this book quite interesting. However, at the end I felt that the Sneddon murder-suicide case should have been reopened and investigated again. A delightful book by all standards!
Another series that is cozy and clean, with admirable protagonists and clear villains. The "vultures" in this case are the rabid fans and those who want to profit from a long dead authoress and the mystery surrounding her death.
It was Mark Twain who said "Write what you know." Robert Barnard who is a wonderful as well as prolific author may well have taken that advice because many of his books are about writers of various kinds. Indeed he wrote about 'The Death of a Mystery Writer",'The Case of the Missing Brontë', as well as about a historical writer in 'A fatal Attachment'.
In this mystery, AHOV the mystery surrounds a long dead brother and sister who wrote dreary literary works that are coming into fashion again. There has been a push to organize the fans as well as set up a museum. Detective Constable Charlie Peace is attending a conference at the new museum because the organizer Gerald Suzman is known to the police as a con man and so far his motives for resuscitating the interest in the dead siblings is not obvious.
Before things get very far murder enters the mix and Charlie has his job to do. Barnard's characters are so well drawn that the reader is engrossed in the story and and even gets to believe that the dead Sneddon siblings are real. I can recommend this book.
Charlie Peace is an appealing character, and although I haven't read the first two in this series, I did meet him in Bodies, where he assisted Perry Trethowan in his murder investigation. By now Charlie seems to be a seasoned detective, although it isn't immediately apparent why he would have been sent to Yorkshire for the inaugural gathering of the Sneddon Society, another literary society that Robert Barnard has cleverly invented. This one gathers at the home of novelist Susannah Sneddon, where she and her brother, Joshua, had lived until he killed her with an axe and then shot himself. This happened so long ago that there are few people who ever saw the Sneddons, so much of the lore is being invented; and the murder, when it happens, is not surprising. Charlie's investigation leads to the killer, of course, and it also leads to an interesting relationship with Felicity, a student in Leeds. 2/21/25: enjoyed re-reading this after reading the first two Charlie Peace books.
I recently learned of Robert Barnard's death, and decided to re-read some of his books as a way of remembering him. To my surprise, the library had one that I hadn't read before--an early adventure of black policeman Dexter "Charlie" Peace. Originally a Londoner, Charlie now works in Yorkshire, where, decades before, the unsuccessful writer Jonah Sneddon killed his more successful sister Susannah and then himself. Now Gerard Suzman has started a Sneddon has started a literary society in their--mostly Susannah's--honor. Charlie goes along because the police don't trust Suzman, who's often been on the fringes of literary forgery and other shady endeavors. It won't hurt to keep an eye on the Sneddon weekend, and try to figure out what Suzman is up to now.
Really great fun because Barnard is such a good writer, but what makes this such a good read is the vultures around a possible best-selling author siblings making it a book bordering on comic noir ... so much ring of truth in how profiteers flock to possible author gold troves. As a book manager, I sighed over an author bemoaning poor sales, blaming "his agent, his editor, the distribution side at his publishers, and above all the publicity people. ..." The rural intrigue, the sad story of a desperately shy and introverted woman writer and, well, the hovering of vultures --to re-read!
One of the earliest Charley Peace books. He's one of my favorite recurring characters and some of the others are introduced here. A great plot and a slightly fannish one, involving literary fraud and an author's fans.
I enjoyed this book. Good characters, a complicated yet reasonable enough plot, no gore or danger to have you feeling anxious throughout it. I'd read another by this author.