I guess I better find some positive affirmations to feed myself after reading this.
I wanted to like this, but Agatha is so unlikable that I could barely get through it. Her new assistant the older detective gentleman, and the copper Bill are likeable characters, I'd rather read from their perspectives.
She is so unlikable that is why she is lonely and bitter. As I age, I find my esteem through my wisdom and experience and encourage younger folk to be happy and free. Agatha has disdain and jealousy. This is antiquated for today's audience and btw I am over 50.
It was sort of a horrible experience, perhaps because of my age, to read about a protagonist so depressed about being older. It reads as if she is attractive. I do know that our society treats older women so much worse than older men, but this character acerbates that sad issue. I'd rather read about a strong, vulnerable, real woman. So I don't want to spend my time in her head, so to speak.
The actual mystery was boring and confusing. The other characters are so flat but could be interesting if Agatha wasn't so closed off.
If you were to give her a very thoughtful expensive gift, she would berated you and make you suffer because it wasn't perfect. Yuck. Kiss Christmas, Friendships, Self-esteem Good-bye.. as well as this series. Life's too short.
That being said, I have enjoyed Hamish Macbeth. He is interesting and enjoyable human being, a non-conformist and a compassionate person who actually loves his village and the people in it. Agatha does not, she's above them and it's disgusting.
But wow, reading this was like reading the exact opposite of Macbeth series. As if she has a formula and replaced each circumstance, adjective and character to be an opposite to Hamish. Hamish calls his wealthy ex-girlfriend and always gets the butler saying she's not available even when she's there because he hates Macbeth. Agatha calls her wealthy friend's house and gets the exact same treatment. Agatha has two cats. Hamish has a dog and a wild cat. The characters seem so familiar in both series. It's the same story but with opposite protagonist. Clearly she thinks more highly of men than women in her books.
I like to read cozy mysteries. I don't think this falls into that category but it isn't hard-boil by any means. I actually like the more 'real' subjects she touches upon, but she pushes these tough subjects back into the cozy realm. It's confusing to be in neither genre and both in the same book. It leaves you feeling almost guilty that these sad issues: family dysfunction, domestic abuse, alcoholism, mental illness are mentioned (which is interesting) but not dealt with because it's not a hard-boil ......or a cozy.
I thought Beaton might be under the mystery sub-genre "Classic" but it feels there's not enough heart and soul in them to be up there with Christie, Chandler and Doyle, for instance. Her books feel more domestic and cozy, yet she touches on tough topics without caring to deal with them. It must be a difficult tightrope to walk. Perhaps she has her own single genre, a new genre of mystery.
MC Beaton is such a prolific writer, and evidently people love this series as well, so I am very glad for her success and perseverance. I would love to read about Agatha's character development. She can still have insecurities, character 'flaws' and also be compassionate and vulnerable. (ie someone you care about, root for and relate to) Agatha is shallow and hateful. When she does good, she seems to regret it and everything that happens is a downer. I truly do not want to hear her inner dialogue.
Well that is my review. If you love Agatha Raisin that's great, she needs all the love she can get.