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Willow King #5

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Elegant sleuth Willow King investigates the suspicious suicide of Dr. Fiona Fydgett, a famous art historian and troublemaker, and suspects abound as Willow races to expose Fiona's killer before she herself becomes the next victim. Reprint.

253 pages, Paperback

First published January 1, 1995

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36 people want to read

About the author

Natasha Cooper

62 books17 followers
aka N.J. Cooper, Kate Hatfield, Clare Layton, Daphne Wright.

Natasha Cooper was Chairman of the Crime Writers' Association in 2000/2001. She reviews books in THE TIMES, THE TIMES LITERARY SUPPLEMENT and the NEW LAW JOURNAL. She is the author of, among others, FAULT LINES and PREY TO ALL.

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5 stars
10 (16%)
4 stars
17 (28%)
3 stars
25 (41%)
2 stars
5 (8%)
1 star
3 (5%)
Displaying 1 - 9 of 9 reviews
Profile Image for Denise Spicer.
Author 18 books70 followers
October 31, 2018
This Willow King mystery has her investigating the practices of the Inland Revenue. Her husband Tom gets shot and is hospitalized while Willow continues her work during the course of which she makes a daring action-packed escape from a burning building. Includes interesting characters, dialogue, red herrings, and descriptions of London.
Profile Image for Laurie D'ghent.
Author 5 books10 followers
January 13, 2018
A little dry, a bit pretentious, but fine otherwise. Mild to moderate swearing.
764 reviews35 followers
August 16, 2012
BEWARE:
I DON"T FLAG SPOILERS. BUT THEN I DON'T PUT MY MY REVIEWS ON ANY FEED.

I myself prefer Cooper's Trish Maguire to her Willow King. But I'll read any Cooper book I can get my hands on. The writer is so sensitive to nuance - of character, of language.

Though I'm not keen on how Cooper titles her King novels, I am starting to get the gist. It's usually adjective + noun that refers to a food or growing thing. (e.g., Sour Grapes, Bitter Herbs). The titles are, to me, more superficial or trite than the books warrant.

I can detect Cooper's cleverness in this book, which is based around a possibly mundane topic - tax collections.

The story combines a tax mystery with a mystery involving a teen boy who's mother has recently either been murdered or commited suicide.

Both Willow and her police husband get seriously injured in the book, during different incidents.

It seems unlikely that Willow's personality would have her allow needy strangers into her home but that is in fact what she does at one point (while hubby is unconscious for days "in hospital," as I think the Brits say.)

Even though I like Maguire better, I think Willow seems suitable as Cooper's first forays into fiction -- as Willow, too, has moved from a desk job to novel writing.
Profile Image for Jussi.
57 reviews8 followers
December 9, 2011
story line wasn't bad and the author knows her craft as writer. unfortunately her tastes are very specific. this book faced up to every cliche in the genre of pretty-smart-girl-in-a-man's-world mysteries and in the genre of daydream-of-life-in-a-quirky-but-immaculately-tasteful-mews-home romance. and lost.
Profile Image for Sarah A.
2,271 reviews19 followers
January 30, 2015
A fun cozy mystery concerning a tax scandal, civil servant unrest and a mystery shooting.
Gentle and interesting story, my first by this author. I will read more but this one lacked any addictive turn paging and was relaxed and a smooth steady adventure.
1,923 reviews8 followers
January 4, 2014
Willow King is mystery solver, civil servant in England, writes romances. Checks into a tax audit of an art historian who committed suicide.
Pretty good.
Profile Image for Margaret.
1,148 reviews3 followers
March 26, 2016
The names of many of the characters are fun--Fydgett, Profett, Scoffer.
Displaying 1 - 9 of 9 reviews

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