2.5 stars
I wouldn't normally reach for a novel like this, simply because although I like crime and mystery novels, I prefer mine American, historical or both but this was a Christmas present and looked a nice light read.
Light it was, I was amazed at how quickly I read it but it's fast paced and there are a multiplicity of characters and endless action to keep the momentum going. I'm a fan of the English TV series Midsomer Murders which are based on the novels of Caroline Graham though I've never read any. They portray an idyllic British countryside with picturesque villages and Lords of the Manor but with a rotten underbelly where numerous murders occur every week. All of these elements were in this book, quirky characters, tiny cottages, pastoral scenes and stately homes but there was also much more going on to the point of chaos.
In Midsomer Murders much is made of the fact that the murder count is never small and the perpetrator often unlikely. To spoil the story entirely, ten people are dead by the end of the novel, two by accident, four murdered and four committed suicide - that's not to mention two other attempted murders! The action has moved from the Cotswolds in England to Philadelphia and the French Mediterranean coast, a small detective agency apparently needs six or seven people working there and Agatha Raisin herself -well she just isn't that appealing - kind of important for a series based around her.
The conversations are often stilted especially for the younger characters and there is a lot of the same conversation, the same "come in and have a nice cup of tea" etc. The plot itself isn't too bad, turning out to be two separate investigations and, perhaps because of its implausibility, keeping you guessing and, as I've said, the action is fast paced but I think I need a little more weight, a little more darkness in my crime novels.