When you read that one of Agatha Raisin's friends Roy Strong is asking 'So what's been happening in Murderville?', you can guess that there has been more than one murder in Carsley and the surrounding district. Roy's perceptive view of the town was not wrong for by the time he was asking there had been four or five murders in the area. And Agatha had been there or thereabouts on each occasion, so much so that she was regularly being questioned by the police, who usually sent her friend Bill Wong to do the interrogating so that it would be more gentle.
The first person to go, as it were, was therapist Jill Davent, who was not on Agatha's Christmas card list for not only was she chasing her ex-husband, James Lacey, for whom Agatha always has a soft spot even though there are a plethora of other men in her life, but Miss Davent was also digging up details of Agatha's rather unsavoury upbringing. And she was not averse to sharing them with other villagers.
So when Agatha exploded at her and shouted, with another villager eavesdroppng outside an open window, 'How dare you hire a private detective to probe into my life. Leave me alone or I'll kill you. But before I murder you, you useless piece of garbage, I am going to sue you for intrusion of privacy.' No surprise, therefore, that when Miss Davent was murdered Agatha was the number one suspect. And later, when the eavesdropper also became a murder victim, Agatha was once again in the frame!
While Agatha continued to run her detective agency, she also found time to have a variety of dalliances with men, of all ages, and time also to spend on investigating the crimes that took place all around her. She has the assistance of some very loyal staff and a couple of friends, whose loyalty at times she doubts, but all of whom went to her rescue when she was in difficult circumstances during her investigations. Indeed, Sir Charles Fraith, who flits in and out of her life at will and who she thinks of inviting to her bed on more than one occasion and on other occasions she just wants him to depart, saved her life for which she was eternally grateful and felt like acting in the former mode afterwards - but she eventually resisted!
At times Carsley seemed a safe rural setting but then when a woman police officer is killed, Agatha had her doubts. But she still threw caution to the wind and tried to follow up the murder despite being warned off by the police. She recruited one of her assistants, Toni. to help but Toni thought Agatha was wrong in her suspicions - but Agatha is nothing if not persuasive. Toni gave Agatha her views with 'You've had mad ideas before and they turned out to be right. Why don't we go with it?' And they did, only for Agatha once again to be in grave danger of being murdered herself.
But, after many close calls and dangerous moments, it all turned out right in the end and Agatha's premonitions went some way to solving the mysterious deaths.
Agatha continues to be a fascinating character and while 'Dishing the Dirt' is somewhat slow at the beginning, the second half of the book improves immeasurably and it develops into the usual Agatha Raising romp.