Christmas Eve, 1943. Anthony and Elva Pratt arrive in a snowy English village to run a murder mystery game - and instead discover a real murder.
The Pratts had planned for festive cheer, despite the wartime with Elva's map of the hotel and Anthony's prop weapons to use as clues, the guests in their parlour game would move through the rooms to figure out whodunnit.
But when Anthony discovers the cook's sister Miss Silver beaten to death, they instead find themselves investigating a shockingly real crime. The hotel manager Mr Browning is trying to keep the peace but the guests are agitated, Colonel Colman is about to take over the hotel for the war effort - and the mysterious Mrs Threadgold hasn't been seen at all.
In games, there's only one victim - but this is real life. Can the Pratts puzzle out this Christmas mystery before it's too late?
Nicola Upson was born in Bury St. Edmunds, Suffolk, and read English at Downing College, Cambridge. She has worked in theatre and as a freelance journalist, and is the author of two non-fiction works, and the recipient of an Escalator Award from Arts Council England. She lives with her partner and splits her time between Cambridge and Cornwall.
Nicola is currently writing the sixth book in the 'Josephine Tey' series, and a standalone novel set in the 1920s.
It is Christmas 1943 and Anthony and Elva Pratt are tryin to get up some Christmas spirit despite the war time shortages. Visiting a hotel where they used to stay before the war they discover a real life murder and end up inventing a murder mystery game.
This is a fictional story about factual figures who did indeed invent the famous boardgame called Cluedo. I found the whole thing to be great fun. The frequent references to the characters in the game were delightful as was the relationship between the two main characters. I always enjoy the way this author writes and having read the whole of her Josephine Tey series I was very keen to read this new project.
Loved the whole book and look forward to anything else Ms Upson writes! Five stars
Thanks to Netgalley and the publisher for the opportunity to read and review this book.
As someone who has a pet hate for real persons being appropriated as fictional characters, this started out sweetly enough. It's a Christmas murder mystery novella starring the couple who invented Cluedo.
I'd just finished reading a very good festive thriller, and this one was a lot less pacy. Because I was less invested, the plot twists probably surprised me more than they should! Which was nice.
But I have one big problem with this book, and that is the highly distressing content toward the end. Check content warnings, for sure.
This is not the first "cosy" Christmas crime novel I have read that contains ill-advised triggering material that subverts the entire tone. If the subjects are glossed over, sometimes a story can get away with it, but I finished The Christmas Clue just feeling intensely sad.
And for a book that contains so many corny references to Cluedo (Colonel Colman? Reverend Teal??!!!), this sabotages all prior efforts to be cosy.
I don't mind mysteries with more sinister content. And if a novel is proficient enough, it might even be able to weather a tonal shift. Sadly, it doesn't work for The Christmas Clue, and it didn't work for Murder on the Christmas Express.
The Christmas Clue takes us back to 1943 and to Tudor Close Hotel in Rottingdean where Anthony and Elva Pratt are booked to be the entertainment for Christmas during the war.
Unfortunately their first stop, to pick up some cigars from Mrs Silver's sweet shop, finds the couple confronted by the shocking scene of Miss Silver's body. The pair have to break the news to the shocked staff of the hotel, after which they need to pull themselves together to provide the entertainment. However, more mysteries begin to come thick and fast and Anthony and Elva have to work hard to stop any further tragedies occur whilst trying to unravel the mystery surrounding two of the guests.
What a delight this book was. Based on the true story of Anthony and Elva Pratt who created Cluedo. This book imagines what events inspired the iconic board game.
I would warn you that, despite the generally cosy feel to the book, there are some quite disturbing revelations at the end which involves child abuse.
In all I really enjoyed this short novel. It was well written and I found it difficult to put down. Nicola Upson was not known to me before but I will definitely read more of her books, which include the Josephine Tey series.
Highly recommended. It would make a great, short holiday read.
Thankyou to Netgalley and Faber & Faber for the advance review copy.
This was great and, despite all the murders, very Christmassy. While reading this story, you really feel as if you are in the hotel, admiring the snow and walking through that lovely old estate. The characters are great, and I had no trouble believing that this was exactly how Cluedo has been created. I also enjoyed the genuine love between our main characters. The plot was great, I didn't see any of the twists coming and I was hooked from the very first page. I hope this finds a wide audience, and a lot of creative booksellers, because this is an interesting and commercial title.
The Christmas Clue is an atmospheric festive novella inspired by the game Cluedo and its inventors, Anthony and Elva Pratt.
It’s Christmas 1943 and the Pratts are planning an escape to Tudor Close, a period manor in the English countryside.
Anthony is a pianist but is working in a munitions factory in Birmingham, and he and his wife are anxious to far get for Christmas and spend it as they used to before the war, ensconced in a luxury hotel providing entertainment to the hotel guests in the form of a murder mystery game.
Things go awry, however, when the couple encounter a real life murder on their way to Tudor Close and they’re determined to get to the bottom of it.
This is a nicely written, clever little story with a loving nod to the timeless board game Cluedo, which we are huge fans of in our house. At just over 100 pages, it’s a perfect fireside read for the festive season (though be warned - there is a disturbing element to the storyline). 3.5-4/5 ⭐️
*Many thanks to Faber Books for the advance copy via @Netgalley. The Christmas Clue is out now.
I really loved the premise of this book which puts the real life creators of the board game Cluedo (Clue here in the States) and surmises the circumstances surrounding how they came up with the idea for the game.
The first two thirds of the book were delightfully cozy but I will give a warning that there is a main plot point involving child abuse which really bothered me. I wish the author had chosen some other crime to focus that aspect of the story on.
This would have been near to five stars for me if that plotline had been omitted.
A slight book, more novella than novel, with prose that flows easily but leaves little impression. The historical setting feels underused, and even the protagonists, the real-life Cluedo creators, come across flat. The plot resolves too smoothly, without the earned payoffs that make even a cosy mystery satisfying.
The author touches on a serious theme, but the handling is light and doesn’t deepen the story. The result is a quick read, competently written but easily forgotten.
Thanks to Netgalley for providing a free copy of this book in exchange for an honest review.
So surprised of the good reviews as it’s one of the worst books I’ve read this year. It’s got massive distressing trigger warnings (child abuse) and on top of that the mystery is a bit meh and the execution of it not even fully satisfying as it attempts a classic style that fails to deliver properly. Waste of my time.
A festive murder mystery which features the inventors of Cluedo Anthony and Elva Pratt. The Pratts have a Christmas engagement during the war in Rottingdean at the Tudor Close Hotel. However instead of entertaining the guests with a murder mystery game they find themselves involved in the real thing.
This is a great read for Christmas and marries fact and fiction beautifully. A nostalgic and throughly entertaining read.
A Christmas cozy crime novel which I bought for my mother-in-law and sneakily read in a day before I wrapped it. [She’ll never know.] The central characters are Anthony and Elva Pratt, the couple who invented the boardgame Cluedo. Colourful surnames abound and this is a sympathetic tribute to the game which has entertained so many people over the decades and is still one of my favourites. An easy enjoyable read.
Xmas marks the spot. Christmas traditionally is a time for tidings of comfort and joy, goodwill to all and peace on earth; festivities round a fire with family and friends; and leisure pursuits like charades and trivial games of skill.
Yet it’s no contradiction that it’s also a time for overindulgence, for ghost stories, and for murder mysteries. What better, then, than to read a story combining that other expected seasonal staple – snow – with rich food, a board game … and death?
So that’s what Nicola Upson serves up for us: a snowbound Tudorbethan hotel in wartime, a proposed origin for the popular game of Cluedo, and means, motives and opportunities for murder!
On the Sussex coast, now dominated by its big neighbour Brighton, sits the village of Rottingdean; it’s Yuletide in wartime Britain and in this fiction – unlike in historical fact – snow is about to fall, promising a white Christmas. Anthony and Elva Pratt are taking a much-needed break at the Tudor Close Hotel which, despite its name, is cobbled together from genuinely old farm buildings and 20th-century terraced housing, prettified with mock beams and borrowed furnishings.
The Pratts are returning to a familiar haunt: before the war Anthony not only was a resident pianist but also – together with Elva – used to devise murder mystery evenings of the kind popular during the Golden Age of detective fiction. Only this time they come across a seemingly genuine murder in a sweet shop on the High Street, a crime which may be obscurely connected with the burial of a child in the graveyard of the adjacent church. And so is set in train an investigation very reminiscent of the set-up in the game of Cluedo (Clue in North America); but this isn’t a comparison to be wondered at because The Christmas Clue pretends to elucidate the origins of the game, invented in 1943 by a couple called … Anthony and Elva Pratt.
Prefiguring, as it were, the characters in the board game, many of the players in this crime fiction have colour-related names; we also have a military man, a clergyman, a cook, an academic and a femme fatale from the game to add to the hotel manager, police detectives and of course our main protagonists. There are the various hotel rooms – both public and private – suspected secret passages, and even potential murder weapons. All in all the author’s premise is an ingenious one, with the game being the identikit of a ‘true’ crime.
However, while detective fiction is a wonderful intellectual exercise challenging the reader to finger the correct suspect before the final reveal, what gives them added value is the connection one might make with one or more characters, encouraging us to care about them as individuals and entertain concern for their wellbeing. Upson does this by basing the Pratts on the actual creators of the game, and she does so with the approval of the late couple’s daughter. Because of Upson’s sympathetic treatment it’s possible for us readers – even though we know the whole set-up is a fictional construct – to accept her version of Anthony and Elva as credible people who really existed.
Finally, murder is murder and, I grant you, a nasty thing to consider, but in crime fiction it’s often possible to regard it dispassionately for the sake of the plot. But The Christmas Clue has a darker aspect to it, a crime that is often more shocking these days than homicide; it’s this aspect that for me gives the novel a heft that takes it beyond a mere evocation of a pleasant Christmas diversion.
A new Nicola Upson novel! And I only came across it after Christmas, wah, but it makes for a good January read as well. You can tell quite a bit of research went into the real life creators of Cluedo, and I love that the mystery involves characters that were scrapped from the game at some point. Had a blast with this scene in particular:
"Yes hello, my name is Anthony Pratt and I'm telephoning from the Tudor Close Hotel. I want to report another murder. Yes, I did say another one. And I have a strong suspicion that the two deaths are connected. Yes, that's what I said, Ethel Silver, spelled like the colour." He rolled his eyes, impatient, at having to repeat himself. "Today's victim? His name is Reverend Teal and he's the vicar of St. Margaret's, Rottingdean. What? Well yes, I suppose it is also spelled like the colour. No, of course that's not the connection. He was hit in the head like Miss Silver, but with a candlestick. Sorry, I didn't catch that? Where? Oh, in the hall, by the Christmas tree."
The Christmas Clue is an historical Christmas novella, featuring Anthony and Elva Pratt, the real life couple who created the board game Cluedo after the Second World War.
It's an excellent murder mystery! I thoroughly enjoyed the period setting.
The characters and the plot were well thought out, and I loved how it was all wrapped around Cluedo (which, in my opinion, is The Greatest Boardgame Of All Time!)
Very, very highly recommended as a crime at Christmas read.
I expected a Cluedo based book, but I did not expect THE Cluedo creators to be involved in this! I thought it was an interesting idea to make a sort of fake documentary, but in a fun cozy mystery.
Only... this seems like it was 1/3 of what the story should have been like. Very fast making the characters super unrealistic. Starting even from the beginning with having an actual war but focusing on murder mysteries and entertainment is just a little bit on the nose. The main duo (the creators!) have a very nice chemistry, but since the book is so focused on this murder mystery... their only personality is mainly their murder mystery games and it's all so rushed! The rest of the cast eventually reads as a caricature with some very extreme traits.
The mystery and cast are actually interesting, if not a tad far-fetched. I do not think this was a real story and I sure hope not, because that was some cray cray stuff there. But to reiterate... it was rushed! Enjoyable to an extent, but reads like a short draft.
Finished the book in 1.5hrs, was truly gripping and an easy read. Was very cosy for a murder mystery and I loved that the creators of Cluedo were inspiration for it. You definitely felt like you were in the actual game.
I loved the creativity of the story and finished the book very quickly because I was eager to see how the characters were intertwined with one another. However, toward the end the story touches on some rather heavy topics that I didn’t expect in this kind of cozy, detective-style narrative. The book maintains a warm and comforting atmosphere for most of the time, which is noticeably disrupted in the final ~50 pages. I would therefore recommend checking the content warnings before reading.
Ποτέ μέχρι τώρα δεν είχα αναρωτηρθεί πώς προέκυψε ως παιχνίδι το cluedo αλλά κοίτα που είμαι εδώ και μόλις διάβασα (άκουσα) μια αρκετά πρωτότυπη ιστορία που διαδραματίζεται μεν τα Χριστούγεννα αλλά θα μπορούσε να λαμβάνει χώρα οποιαδήποτε στιγμή τον χειμώνα. Προκείται για ένα fiction βιβλίο που όμως αφορά πραγματικά πρόσωπα και συγκεκριμένα το ζευγάρι που πρωτοσκέφτηκε ως concept το cluedo. Είναι ένας παλιάς κοπής murder mystery που ξεκινάει από κάτι πολύ "αθώο" αλλά καταλήγει σε κανονικό φόνο και σε παίρνει μαζί του καθώς ξετυλίγεται η ιστορία του κάθε ήρωά μας. Το βρήκα wholesome, ο,τι πρέπει για ένα γρήγορο ανάγνωσμα, επουδενί όχι τόσο περίπλοκο όσο τα έργα της θείας Άγκαθας, χωρίς αυτό να είναι απαραίτητα κακό, αλλά σίγουρα δεν πήρα καθόλου χριστουγεννιάτικο πνεύμα, οπότε δεν θα το χαρακτήριζα christmas story. Απλά έτυχε να λαμβάνει χώρα τότε, δεν παίζει κατά τα άλλα σχεδόν κανένα ρόλο στην αφήγηση. Ήταν πολύ γρήγορο σε ρυθμούς, χωρίς όμως να σε κάνει να χάνεσαι, πράγμα που εκτιμώ σε audiobooks. Συνολικά, ενδιαφέρον ανάγνωσμα για να περάσει η ώρα, ειδικά για άτομα που εκτιμούν πολύ τα murder mysteries/ whodunnit stories.
The perfect read to begin the Christmas hols. It’s not about to win any prizes for literature but this hit the festive murder mystery spot bang on. Why is it murder mystery is comforting???
I’ve never thought to wonder about the origins of Cluedo - and was delighted to find the answers in this book (or more specifically, in the authors note at the end)
This is a classic English murder mystery when on snowy Christmas Eve, in 1943, married couple Anthony and Elva Pratt find themselves investigating a real murder instead of running the murder mystery night that they were hired for by the hotel.
I’m very partial to anything with Agatha Christie vibes and every year I look for a Christmas whodunnit- with varying levels of success. This one ticked all my boxes - very enjoyable, especially as the direction it took - surprised me.
Read this over the holidays and for the most part it was an enjoyable read as I love a murder mystery at Christmas.
Rated so low however as the fairly grim twists towards the end of the book just didn’t feel right in tone. I don’t necessarily have a problem with these issues being covered in literature but the story was so short that it was very lightly glossed over to wrap up the story that it felt jarring.
Definitely preferred the first half of the book up until the *SPOILER* revelations of child SA.
In that first half the pacing felt better, I was endeared to the main couple, and I loved the wartime setting. The second half however felt rushed, lack of time to deal with the topic with the care it needs & left me with a somewhat confused feeling at the end.
It’s a short book so I’m not too mad about it but not sure I would recommend.
It was essentially your classic murder mystery, however I just felt it was always a difficult task to write a complex and difficult one in the space of around 150 pages.
Credit where it’s due, this was multilayered, and I was quite surprised at how much they fit in as a way to keep it interesting. Despite this, it was less trying to track down the killer and more trying to arrest the killer who was already known as the very few suspects involved just meant it was clear who it was.
As well as this, the characters who were involved didn’t have enough depth for me and I just felt it needed a bit more.
I felt like I was in a real life murder mystery/Cluedo game whilst reading!
This was a great shorter Christmas read. There were a lot of characters to keep track of but once you heard from them a few times you started to remember who they were.
I really loved that this was based on the couple who invented Cluedo and how the author wove a ‘real’ murder mystery into the concept.
The main character’s were all very good in their roles and you definitely got a feel for them and their personalities. The twists were twisting and I absolutely didn’t work out where this one was going!
The Christmas Clue is an enjoyable novel starring the married couple Anthony and Elva Pratt who invented the board game Cluedo. This story is imagining how they might have come to think up the game and what events (murders) might have led to it.
It’s a short book, under 200 pages and very easy reading with a festive feel. I quite enjoyed this and despite being short and sweet had some serious themes as well as a good twist or two!
If you’re looking for a present or a read to devour in a day then this is definitely one to pick up!
I quite enjoyed this book, but found that it didn't make me quite as Christmassy as I'd hoped due to the nature of one of the reveals. an interesting book but not light-hearted enough to make me feel christmassy