This is an extremely lighthearted historical romance that is also a sendup of the cozy mystery genre. Set in 1930s rural England, Georgie, inadvertent amateur sleuth, has started to think that four murders in one year is really quite a lot. There have been so many in her small English town that "Murder Tourists" have begun to show up. When another body shows up, Georgie is convinced it is connected, despite the fact that it's been deemed death by natural causes. So, she calls in celebrated private detective Delacey Fitzgibbon ... who send his charming, brainless assistant, instead.
Sebastian is blond, good-looking, and effortlessly connects with the entire town while Georgie simmers with rage. Despite the fact that she hates him, the two of them just happen to make a great detecting duo, and begin the tedious work of following up on leads, taking interviews, engaging in a little B&E, and all of the other things amateur sleuths do in cozy mysteries.
The book knows exactly what tropes it's engaging with, and makes sure you as the reader also know you know it knows. The mystery is actually really well-constructed, the romance is as fun as the best black cat/golden retriever romances can be (yes, we hear plenty about Harriet Vane and Peter Wimsey, who just might be the OG black cat/golden retriever couple, no?), and the whole book is just so stinking cute you can even forget that our characters' HEA is going to involve a world war in just a few years!
And I can't let this go without mentioning it - as someone who is a member of a group chat entitled "Tennis Thirst Traps," I would be remiss if I didn't tell you that Martha Waters 100% understand the tennis player appeal. Sebastian may be a himbo, but he knows how to wear a set of tennis whites (and Georgie knows how to appreciate it).
4-Word Summaries:
Meg: Tennis whites, I presume?
Laine: Now this is COZY.
This objective review is based on a complimentary copy of the novel.