The Widows’ Guide to Skulduggery is the third book in the Widows’ Detective Club series by Australian-born New Zealand author, Amanda Ashby. Ginny Cole and her library colleague, Connor West are at his sister, Grace’s wedding to Theo Faulkner, but things aren’t going smoothly. It’s clear that many of his family, Waldon-on-Marsh nobility, don’t approve of his choice, a Little Shaw local; nasty words fly between the families; and then, the ring-bearer dog drops a skull at the bride’s feet.
The police attend, DI Angela Sterling, a friend of the Faulkner family; accusing looks are thrown at the West family; the wedding is off. In the aftermath, though, Ginny encounters Lady Kitty Faulkner, who is nothing but friendly, and disappointed that her nephew and heir’s wedding is not going ahead. There’s talk of the curse believed to exist between the two villages…
The skull, it turns out, has been missing for twenty years, belonging to a woman who went missing, whose husband then apparently suicided, leaving a confession to her murder. DI Sterling considers that case now closed. But Grace’s formidable grandmother, Maureen West calls in the Widows Detective Club: she wants them to find out how and why the skull turned up in the churchyard, in soil that doesn’t match the traces in the skull. Who has sabotaged her granddaughter’s wedding?
Having been previously warned off by her policeman neighbour, Ginny is wary, but agrees that returning the wedding gifts to the guests is an opportunity to discover something about them, and perhaps a motive. The most obvious suspects are Theo’s ex, who made quite a scene at the church, and his mother, whose disapproval of Grace was clear. But the people of Walton-on-Marsh are unfriendly and taciturn. Only the church gardener has a tip for them.
In between her library work, volunteer cemetery tidying, trying to please a cat whose appetite is suddenly fussy, and trying to get fitter at Senior Shuffle and Shake, they trawl through old newspapers to learn the history of the families involved and the circumstances of the murder. There are also vlogs by an Instagram influencer to view, and certain maps provide a clue.
This instalment of the Widows’ Detective Club, with its very punny title, has quite a slow build, with most of the action in the final third of the book, when there’s murder, kidnap, abduction at knifepoint, revelations of infidelity, secret paternity, and inheritance at stake. A bit more backstory for the four widows is provided, and the author’s note promises a further instalment, to which avid fans may look forward. Passable cosy British crime.
This unbiased review is from an uncorrected proof copy provided by NetGalley and Storm Publishing