A murder, a secret identity, and a courageous heroine are the essential ingredients in this cleverly crafted and witty detective novel. Natasha Cooper is the pseudonym of the author of several successful historical novels.
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.
Not a bad amateur detective story but not really to my tastes. More romance than what I expected and the plotting was a bit too drawn out. Liked the main character well enough to finish but probably will not read further in the series.
Published in 1990, this is a good read but feels quite dated. Willow King works for the Department of Old Age Pensions but leads a double life as the author of romantic bestsellers.
When a minister, Algernon Endesham, is killed on Clapham Common, Inspector Tom Worth comes in to investigate. Willow is frightened that her identity will be unearthed and decides to discover the murderer before the police.
This was fun. I liked Willow and would definitely read the next in the series. However, if you are planning to read this, remember it was written in a different time - one I lived through - and so it does jar a little with modern sensibilities. Be warned and avoid if you think it will annoy you.
This is really good. Not one of the characters felt anything other than real, and the plot was believable. And best of all I didn't guess who it was until almost the ending the book! I'm looking forward to reading the next one.
Originally titled "Festering Lilies" (I have no idea why), I read this because Natasha Cooper was a presenter at Magna Cum Murder ( a murder mystery convention that I've attended for many years) several years ago and I enjoyed meeting her and listening to her speak. This is not an amazing great book, it was actually the first in a series which I think has some potential. It looks like there are maybe 6 more books in the series and I'd be willing to try one more to see how it goes. Willow King lives a double life, in one she's a civil servant helping in the DOAP (department of old age pensions) and in the other she's a glamorous author. Regardless of which role she's playing, she's intrigued by the death of a co-worked and goes after solving the mystery with all her abilities.
I thought this series "Willow King" heroine sounded good when I read about it. I read this book and for me it was awful. I should have read the bio first on the author as she is a romance novelist...need I say more?! The writing was simple (cant think of a better word) and I skimmed to the end just to see who the killer was -- like it mattered. I rate this in the minus zone.