The Last Remains by Elly Griffiths – A Ruth Glalloway Mystery

The Ruth Galloway Mystery series is one of the best, most endearing and fascinating mystery series I have ever read. The series follows Ruth who is a forensic archaeologist Professor at a university in Norfolk UK. She lives by the sea next to marsh lands in a lonely cottage and though that sounds grey and dull it is a homely and anchoring setting. Ruth’s character is brilliant and thoughtful with a trenchant POV and her vulnerabilities are common ones that many women can instantly relate to. Her friends are mostly quirky individualists or academics or police (long story that) and not stock supporting characters, their stories are part of the series too. What makes the series so satisfying is it builds on the preceding novels while introducing new characters in the latest book while exploring prior characters back stories, who grow and change and tie both into the current action which keeps the series fresh and interesting.  Her writing style is a blend of realism and whimsy and grounded observations together with haunting moody mysticism. Elly Griffiths is a master of building suspense slowly and steadily and alternating it with simultaneous situations occurring alongside each other which form a shifting cumulative narrative picture. It is a well-loved series for me because the characters create an emotional pull which I find is rare in a mystery.

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Limelight (Penny Green #1) by Emily Organ

This mystery is set in a Victorian London swathed in smoggy fog with omnibuses pulled by horses, railways clattering by, steamboats on the Thames, smoke filled pubs and posh squares lined with newly built townhouses. The London of an evolving Scotland Yard when ‘case files’ were considered a novel policing technique and women riding bicycles was considered risqué, when men routinely wore top hats and women perched small hats on their heads and wore elaborate dresses with bustles. The heroine is also a novelty a single woman journalist working on Fleet Street for a daily paper. She is struggling to survive after a career setback and is offered a lifeline by a young Scotland Yard inspector who needs her insider knowledge to assist him in solving the scandalous murder of a famous actress, Lizzie Dixie, whom she was friends with. Penny Green agrees to help only if she is re-instated at her old job and she tries to balance her own sorrow with her desire to find justice for her old friend and Annie, her daughter. Penny’s connections in the theater world gain access for her and the inspector to meet with the Drury Lane theater proprietor Sebastian an early supporter of Lizzie and Lizzie’s husband an overbearing successful showman in the style of a P.T. Barnum.

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Death at the Abbey by Jan Durham – A Kipper Cottage Mystery

The seaside town of Whitby, overlooked by the ruisn of a famous medieval Abbey high on a cliff, is the setting for this new series featuring Liz, a widowed early retiree who moves to Whitby, buys the adjacent Kipper and Gull Cottages to live in and renovate. For company she rescues Nelson an English Bull terrier, and while walking one morning in the church graveyard near the ancient Abbey they find the dead body of the well-known Professor Crowby recently working on curating the Abbey museum collection.

When Liz hears the corpse had drowned, her curiosity gets the better of her and when she visits an antique dealer to get an appraisal on some old ginger beer bottles found during renovating and later hears that a valuable medieval girdle or belt worth 80,000 pounds has recently gone missing from the Abbey museum – that plus knowledge that the deceased Professor had been receiving regular payments from the same antique dealer – she returns to the shop with her pal Jilly and finds more than antiques, another corpse. This puts Liz and Jilly in an even worse position with the new caustic chief inspector.  This makes Liz even more determined  to discover how the  two deaths might be connected but is at a loss and getting nowhere chasing suspicions and asking questions.  The cottage renovation however is going well and between Mah Jong games, walks with Nelson and removing old carpet and laying new tile she’s pretty busy!

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Sixpenny Holding by Margaret Scutt – A Classic Village Crime Mystery

This is a mystery and a second chances story set in early 1960s rural England and tells the story of an ordinary middle aged single woman who buys a dilapidated cottage, Sixpenny Holding, hoping to finally begin living life on her terms. She dreams of writing romantic novels of suspense and this ambition is complicated when her widowed brother’s daughter’s caregiver, her aunt, dies suddenly and Marian finds herself raising an opinionated 5-year-old. Both are initially wary of each other but slowly things improve and a cousin, a withdrawn 11-year-old, temporarily joins the tiny household together with a kitten. It sounds too sweet but it’s not, mostly because Marian is a combination of down to earth and whimsical that is in tune with the ramshackle ancient cottage.

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Murder is in the Air by Frances Brody – A Kate Shackleton Mystery

 This is a traditional mystery series with a modern heroine, Kate Shackleton, who runs a detective agency with her assistant Sykes a retired policeman, and her housekeeper who acts as a sometimes aide/secretary. What sets this series apart to me is that it captures the essence of a time as the modern era clashes and challenges the traditional in post WWI England and typically features some aspect of the new era, in this mystery it’s a pageant for North Riding Brewery queen and the use of branding as a marketing tool.

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To Perish in Penzance – by Jeanne M Dams a Dorothy Martin Mystery

I love this series, it’s a traditional cozy set in England narrated by a transplanted American, Dorothy Martin, a 60-ish widow happily re-married to a retired English Chief Constable, Alan Nesbitt, who lives in a quintessential English cottage in a cathedral town in southeast England. Dorothy is unabashedly an Anglophile and mixes enthusiasm with sharp humor and sometimes tact. She forges ahead in life but this energy is tempered by common sense  and her impulsive, intuitive style and outspokenness are softened by shrewdness and the ability to connect random dots into a cohesive pattern. She is also very funny in her observations and descriptions are effortlessly entertaining.  This lady has style and it’s not just her hats!

Dorothy and Alan are on a short holiday to Cornwall staying at a small hotel in Penzance where they meet a famous young model Alexis travelling with her very ill aunt and this chance acquaintance becomes the keystone of the plot when the young woman is missing and found in a remote cove by Dorothy and Alan. This is eerily similar to an unsolved case Alan had investigated as a young policeman and which still haunts him. Dorothy reaches out to the aunt, Mrs. Crosby, to console and help her and learns the back story of Alexis’ life which turns out to be connected to the much older, unsolved mystery.

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Murder at the Mena House – A Jane Wunderly Mystery by Erica Ruth Neubauer

This is a roaring 20’s mystery featuring the spirited Jane Wunderly, a young widow traveling with her aunt and staying at the Mena House, a luxury resort situated outside Cairo, Egypt near some of the great pyramids. It is a cosmopolitan mystery with sharp pointed dialog and continental manners and customs but not stale or cliched because of the fresh and natural objective tone of Jane Wunderly’s narration.

A resort hotel is an intriguing setting for a mystery with its anonymity and activities focused on relaxation plus the Mena House has the glamour and exotic allure of its surroundings, ancient and modern Egypt providing an oasis of comfort for the wealthy guests who mingle at the bar, by the pool, on the verandas and in the restaurants. But the atmosphere is shattered when the flirtatious and flamboyant daughter of an English colonel is found shot dead in her locked room and Jane becomes a prime suspect.

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There’s a Murder Afoot – A Sherlock Holmes Bookshop Mystery by Vicki Delany

For lovers of Sherlock Holmes, cozy mysteries and London, England this mystery is a match made in Holmes Heaven, I enjoyed it because I love mysteries set in England and cozies plus am a fan of Sherlock Holmes (especially the old Basil Rathbone movies made in the 1940s). This novel is part of a series set in New England but in ‘There’s a Murder Afoot’ English transplant Gemma and her American friends cross the big pond in January to attend a Sherlock Holmes Convention in Kensington, London.

This is a very skillfully written mystery blending action, lively dialog and surprise twists and turns with ease. It is in the ‘hard to put down’ category but it’s a relaxing style of suspense, with lots of humor and bantor that is not annoyingly cute but a bit tart especially between Gemma and her sister, the too British to be real, Pippa. It also has elements of classic Brit snob-ism and plenty of references to the charms of London which I would love to visit some day.

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The Mitford Murders by Jessica Fellowes

This mystery channels the Golden Age of British mystery and combines reality and fiction with the true, unsolved murder of Florence Nightingale’s goddaughter and the famous Mitford sisters and weaves these historical figures with fictional characters in a twisty plot set in post WWI sooty, dangerous London and a safe, serene English manor house. Trains are another nostalgic touch and transport the reader back to another time, the scared, determined Louisa who escapes from a train, Harry the railway policeman investigating the murder, Nancy Mitford who travels between the family estate to London by train it ends up linking these three together – so different and so important to each other’s growth, they form the core of the story.

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The Stranger Diaries by Elly Griffiths

This is an enthralling British mystery that combines suspense, motherhood, an adorable dog, teaching, teenagers, police procedure, modern romance, witchcraft, a Victorian ghost story, a real spectral legend, stalking, train rides and murders.  Definitely in the ‘hard to put down’ category I hated to see this book end.  It is a multi-narrator mystery but it’s really Clare’s story, a divorced single mom in her early 40’s teaching English lit at the high school rocked by the murders.  The others are a mid-30’s Anglo-Indian woman, Harbinder, a tightly wound Police Inspector with a wry sensibility and Clare’s 15 year old daughter, Georgia, who is a normal teenager except for her active but secret interest in the paranormal.

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