The story:
The small harbour of Hamlet Wick is divided over plans to develop the local lighthouse. But when some of the residents gather at a murder mystery party on New Year’s Eve, no one expects there to be a real crime committed…
My thoughts:
Having enjoyed last year’s “A Fatal Crossing” by Tom Hindle, I was keen to read his latest murder mystery. This time the story is set in the present day, and the book begins by introducing us to the inhabitants of the small Devonshire town of Hamlet and neighbouring Hamlet Wick, in which the residents are at odds over the development of the local lighthouse into a luxury home. So-called “local boy turned London property magnate” Damien White has obtained planning permission, but local opinion agrees that the this should have gone to local tourist board head Gwen Holloway, and her proposal to develop the lighthouse into a memorial to a tragic past event in the village.
So the scene is set for a pretty awkward evening, when on New Year’s Eve various local residents attend a murder mystery party at hotel Hamlet Hall, organised by a Will Hooper, a young man with a troubled past who has his own reasons for wanting the night to be a success. Gwen, along with local shopkeeper and leader of a campaign to save the lighthouse, Edward Finn, represent the village point of view. On the other side, Nigel Cobb, local contractor currently employed by White on the renovations on the lighthouse. And for good measure, Justin Fletcher, journalist on the local paper the Hamlet Herold, is in attendance and determined to get a good story that might be his ticket to a better job.
After the introduction to the main players in the story, the book proceeds in hourly increments, starting at seven o’clock and the beginning of the murder mystery party. There things take a turn for the even more awkward when the hated Damien White himself turns up with his daughter, as the final guests for the party.
Of course, the inevitable happens, and one of the guests ends up dead, and it seems impossible for anyone to have left the hotel. So the murderer is among them, and it’s left to the guests, along with local PC Natalie Fay, to get to the bottom of the group’s hidden secrets and possible motives, and uncover the killer.
This is a classic murder mystery, with an isolated location and a killer amongst the guests. I thoroughly enjoyed the clever plot, and the way the book was structured in hourly blocks as the night progresses kept things moving at a good pace. Many of the guests have plausible motives for the killing, and Hindle keeps us guessing before the dramatic reveal at the end of the story. Highly recommended to fans of Anthony Horowitz, Richard Osman and Agatha Christie!