Following a painful divorce Cassandra James takes up a lectureship in a Cambridge College. When her friend and colleague Margaret Joplin dies of an apparent poolside accident, James becomes the acting head of the English Department, as well as the deceased's literary executor. An inspection of Joplin's private papers soon leads James to suspect that foul play was involved in her death and that she herself might be the killer’s next target. Will her skills in solving literary puzzles help her to unmask the assassin?
Christine Poulson was born and brought up in North Yorkshire, England. She is now a research fellow at the Centre for Nineteenth-Century Studies at Sheffield University and chair of the William Morris Society. She has written widely on 19th-century art and literature, and her most recent work of non-fiction was a book on Arthurian legend in British art from 1840 to 1920. She lives with her family in a water mill in Derbyshire, England.
When a good friend and head of her department dies, Cassandra James takes over. It's hard time for her because while some think her friend committed suicide, Cassandra thinks it's murder. A lot of the story deals more with the pressures of working in a university, getting people to publish or perish. In the end, that's the heart of the whole story.
I found the book very slow, repetitive,and too predictable. I did finish it, but I found myself skimming because I got bored. It was okay, but it could've been so much better. Not to mention the ending where Cassandra knows who the killer is, but then lets her in the house to help deliver her baby was just not believable to me. It was just weird.
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
Being an academic mystery fan I can't resist snatching them off the library shelves when I see them. I should have left this one on the shelf. The writing is not crisp and the story just did not hold my interest. I did finish it...just.
This was a decent first novel. I must admit, however, that I'm not a fan of pregnant women as a plot device and even less fond of childbirth as an event in this type of book. Save it for the touchy feelies and just let the cozies be cozies.
Murder mystery (not a police procedural) based around multiple deaths in and around a Cambridge College. The plot is very convoluted and the role of the principal (a divorced lecturer battling for her job, carrying a baby, and in a complex romantic relationship) rather implausible. Very slow in the middle and involving the introduction of bizarre story-lines including seances and the occult. I struggled through it, but the poor writing, lack of character development, and weirdly the clunky formatting on my Kindle nearly made me give up.
To be honest, this book was a chore to get through. The writing was clunky, the characters (with the minimal exclusion of the lead) weren't really developed, and the ending was a hot, rushed mess. If you want to challenge yourself by trying to get through a dull book, be my guest. Otherwise, it'd be best to stay away from this particular novel.
Set in the English department of one of the Cambridge University colleges, the detective, Cassandra James, is a professor who specializes in Victorian authors. All it takes is a slight exaggeration of the normal wrangling within the typical college or university to imagine a motive for murder. An entertaining read but probably more interesting to readers tuned into academic settings.
Loved everything until Cassandra became pregnant and her relationship with Stephen seemed like a whatever thing. This had me on the edge of my seat and I never thought it would be who it was. Lawrence is such a douche lol and I wish she would have yelled at him. I will definitely read book two.
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
The writing was dull and the story predictable. It's a short book but hard to push through because the main character is so flat and boring.
Cassandra James stumbles upon the murder of her colleague and over the next few months she can't get over it. Without meaning to she learns more facts about the death and figures out that another colleague is the murderer.
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
A nice debut mystery novel. I very much liked the setting and the professor / sleuth, Dr. Cassandra James. The book drags a tiny bit in the middle but builds to a nice climax in which the killer was not at all who I was suspecting. I hope there are more books in the series.