3.0 - Predictable Sequel in Delightful Gay Cozy British Mystery Series
I really enjoy cozy British mysteries, whether on PBS or on page, even if it didn't live up to book 1. It was still a nice sequel in Robert Innes' entertaining series of cozy gay mysteries, each a standalone with an impossible crime, and in the background the developing relationship between DS Harte and Harrison.
So, how could multiple victims suddenly drop dead of a heart attack, all in the confession booth? This one I did not puzzle over as much - maybe it was because, as they actually reference in this book, I've watched a lot of Midsomer Murders. So as things are revealed, I ended up suspecting the actual culprit from the moment they entered, I figured out early on how it was done, and was only just a bit hazy on a couple of motivations behind the murders.
I was also bothered by an obvious error. It wasn't the verb usage, which I found is a form of dialect that made me feel a part of the locale. It was a mix up between Catholic and Anglican practices (unless "Catholic" is loosely used locally to refer to a Church of England).
Still, I sat back and enjoyed this with all its elements of a good gay cozy mystery. An easy read. A quaint village. Colorful characters. While "cozy," an edginess surrounding murder and the psychology, motivations and faults of people. A likable gay DS getting settled in his new job and town. A potential gay relationship (this was not an "m/m romance" per se) that refreshingly did not take center stage but was just a part of life.
And a classic culmination, put best by DS Harte himself in book 3, "Thanks for coming everybody. I'm sorry to make this all so cliched [I'm not], but in this instance, I'm afraid it was necessary." So again in the colloquial vernacular, the ending did brought closure to the mystery, and the epilogue had set me up nicely for the next one.