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226 pages, Kindle Edition
First published January 1, 1968
"L'amour est tum tumHeron Carvic wrote the first five Miss Seeton mysteries. Although the series continued with other authors none of them really rang true. Those first five though are great fun.
De something..."
So colorful. Not romantic—no, one couldn’t call it that; if anything perhaps a trifle sordid. Carmen, herself, for instance, no better than she should be. In fact, if one were frank, worse. And the other girl, the young one; it was difficult to feel sorry for her. Her fiancé, quite obsessed with his mother—obviously weak and easily influenced—would have made a most unsatisfactory husband in any case. Still, for him to stab Carmen at the end like that—so unnecessary. Almost contrived. Though, of course, one must not forget that foreigners felt differently about these matters. One read that people abroad did frequently get emotional and kill each other. Probably the heat.
"Wife always first suspect. Hire someone. Don't let 'em overcharge."All the juggling about as the villagers try to figure out a welcoming gift for Miss Seeton was too funny. The hen house war yields names and great adventure for Sir George and Nigel as they hare off to battle in her ladyship's MG. The kidnapping that goes in reverse and ends for young Ginger when Miss Seeton gets indignant at the hearing over her crushed hat.
"'Sarcasm and rudeness aren't exactly helpful.'"I quite agree,' retorted Nigel, 'but I don't see why it should be one-way traffic.'"That comment Miss Seeton makes about the "gardener" who wrote How Does Your Garden Grow? cracked me up.
He explains her to Bob as "everybody's conscience, . . . Humanity's backbone . . . [going] to the stake for you again and again; . . . as a matter of principle".A thought that has Bob wondering about emigrating to Canada where the Mounties only ever get their "man". Certainly Brinton is moaning about how quiet the area used to be before she showed with her brolly in action.
"Wife always first suspect. Hire someone. Don't let 'em overcharge."All the juggling about as the villagers try to figure out a welcoming gift for Miss Seeton was too funny. The hen house war yields names and great adventure for Sir George and Nigel as they hare off to battle in her ladyship's MG. The kidnapping that goes in reverse and ends for young Ginger when Miss Seeton gets indignant at the hearing over her crushed hat.
"'Sarcasm and rudeness aren't exactly helpful.'"I quite agree,' retorted Nigel, 'but I don't see why it should be one-way traffic.'"That comment Miss Seeton makes about the "gardener" who wrote How Does Your Garden Grow? cracked me up.
He explains her to Bob as "everybody's conscience, . . . Humanity's backbone . . . [going] to the stake for you again and again; . . . as a matter of principle".A thought that has Bob wondering about emigrating to Canada where the Mounties only ever get their "man". Certainly Brinton is moaning about how quiet the area used to be before she showed with her brolly in action.