1937, #8 Albert Campion, Enquiry Agent, London and rural Kepesake. This is a long novella not an actual novel, and uses, unusual for the series, Campion's own first person narration. A nasty bully is dead (twice), bodies go missing, very strange folks abound in the sweet little village of Kepesake, and then there's Lugg... Wonderful almost-thriller, true classic; four stars.
"Pig" Peters was a much-dreaded bully during Campion's school-years, so when he reads the obituary stating that Peters' funeral is to be held the next day, he's not at all unhappy about it. But then an anonymous letter arrives, and it, too, mentions Peters - and death. Some coincidence - it was mailed a day or two previous to Peters' actual demise... Campion's curiosity is aroused (of course!) and he feels it might be a good idea to go to the funeral and see what's going on, for himself.
Everything goes the way a funeral is supposed to go, although there aren't many mourners, and those that are there are a rather peculiar lot. Campion goes home and promptly forgets about it all. But six months later he is asked by a long-time family friend, a judge, to come down to the little village of Kepesake to help in the investigation of a (possibly) accidental death. Upon arrival he finds that the dead man not only looks a lot like Pig but truly IS Pig Peters. So who was buried six months ago? And why? And as he was undoubtedly murdered, who actually killed him *this* time? Was it, as Judge Leo fears, his beloved Poppy, or one of her many other admirers?
This tasty thriller has enough goings-on for a full novel, but for some reason Allingham chose to not flesh it out enough for that. Nonetheless, it's chock full of wonderful things, including a very strongly woven plot (although the basic premise might be easy to guess now), glorious characterizations - pretty nearly every participant, but IMO the best were Judge Leo, Miss Effie, Poppy, and Albert himself. And the pace is just the good side of frantic, as this novella moves rather similarly to her earliest Campion books, with something peculiar and some sort of chase or active investigatory thing going on at almost every page or so.
Although her style here is almost that of her earlier work, her execution is quite superior to even that good writing, as she fully enthralls the reader in the goings-on in little Kepesake. Nice folks, mean and cruel folks, "difficult" folks, all show up here, and each has something to add to the plot. Not terribly believable even for 1937, but it's wonderful stuff, if a mite frantic in spots.
The TV film made from this in the late 1980s starring Peter Davison was superb, as all the action translated very nicely to the screen. It's all fairly light-hearted and entertaining, as is this wonderful short read (only 165 pages in large print!), although the prose version has nicely dark edges too.