A Murder of Crows is the first book in the Nell Ward Mystery series by British-born ecologist and author, Sarah Yarwood-Lovett. When Sophie Crows head is bashed in with a half brick in a tunnel under Manor House Farm, it turns out there are quite a few people with motive and opportunity, and it’s up to DS James Clark to untangle that mess.
Sophie had a meeting scheduled with ecologist Dr Nell Ward on the afternoon she died, but never turned up. Nell had spent all day doing a survey of Manor Park Farm, and was somewhere in that tunnel when Sophie was murdered, so now she’s a suspect.
Sophie’s husband of eight months, developer David Stephenson was, at the time of Sophie’s murder, at a conference in nearby Pendlebury, networking to get council approval for the development he has planned for Manor House Farm, which is not, in fact, the equestrian centre that Sophie thought they were creating. Was he aware that Sophie had learned of this betrayal, had changed her will, and begun divorce proceedings?
It was the intended bequest of Sophie’s grandmother Marjorie Crows that would allow her to build her longed-for centre. Together with her solicitor, Andrew Arden, this fit and healthy elderly woman, living at Applewood Residential Care Home, was determined to thwart David’s plans. So when Marjorie is suddenly rushed to hospital, James and his team suspect foul play.
Within days of Sophie’s murder, the police have two main suspects: one with no alibi and no apparent motive; the other with plenty of motive but a strong alibi; concentrating on the former puts Nell’s true identity and an unhappy past incident under the spotlight as the police jump to erroneous conclusions.
Against the advice of her legal counsel, Nell decides she needs to conduct her own investigation to prove her innocence and, luckily, her colleague, Dr Adam Kashyap is ready to help. Of course, the pair are doing this without the benefit of information the police have about the convoluted situation with the wills and their conditions, prospective divorce proceedings, and alibis. Our ecologists are working it from the plant and wildlife angle.
Yarwood-Lovett’s first novel is cleverly plotted, has some appealing characters and enough twists and red herrings to keep the pages turning right up to the dramatic climax. There’s also potential romance with Nell’s admirers to add a bit of spice. This cosy mystery is followed by at least two more: A Cast of Falcons and A Mischief of Rats. A very entertaining debut.
This unbiased review is from an uncorrected proof copy provided by NetGalley and Embla Books