Georgette Heyer, famous for her Regencies, should not have her crime series overlooked. The mysteries are charming, with fully developed characters and a Country House background. They are tightly woven and entertaining and I had more than one chuckle out of a character named,"Terrible Timothy."
This is a time frame when the language was full of words like "corkers." I have always liked the Golden Era of writing mysteries for their colorful language and descriptions of evenings spent with cocktails and playing games after everyone dressed for dinner. The sophisticated atmosphere included mists and walks after dinner... filled with ways to bump off a character. The English Manor house style is just a narrative I really like. When you read these books you are getting a bit of history too on the side. I had a good laugh at the fast cars of 40 miles per hour.
Silas Kane is celebrating his sixtieth birthday among family and business partners. The celebration is rife with atmosphere between Rosemary Kane and her Husband, Clement, as well as the Mansell's... Partners to the Kanes and very much interested in a business proposition, which Kane would need to put up twenty thousand pounds in - if he agreed. A business proposal that he meant to turn down ...when he is found dead one morning.
A very delightful mystery and one that was extremely entertaining I quite admit I love these British 1930's and 1940's set mysteries and if you do -read this one. Five stars...
Blurb:
Silas Kane's sixtieth birthday party is marred by argument and
dissension amongst his family, and then the next morning, Kane is found
dead. The coroner's verdict of death by misadventure would seem to
confirm that Silas accidentally lost his way in the fog. But then his
heir is shot, and threats are made against the next in line to inherit
his fortune.The redoubtable Superintendent Hannasyde is called in to
investigate. All clues point to an apparently innocuous eighty-year-old
woman, but as the Inspector delves further into the case, he discovers
that nothing is quite as it seems?
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