Review by Booklist Review
Adventuress and free spirit Beryl Helliwell has settled down in the small English village of Walmsley Parva with her good friend, the refined, conventional Edwina Davenport, and the two have opened a private-enquiry agency. When the obnoxious Hector Lomax is found murdered in the village churchyard, Edwina's elderly gardener, Hector's brother-in-law, is an early suspect. However, soon young Jack Prentice, a local paperboy for whom Beryl has a soft spot, asks to hire Beryl and Edwina when his father is arrested for the murder after being discovered by the vicar passed out next to a bloody shovel near where Lomax's body was found. Beryl and Edwina soon uncover numerous other suspects who had reason to want Lomax dead. When out-of-town visitors arrive, the two have additional problems to unravel. These polar opposites who complement one another ultimately untangle the clues and catch the killer. Firmly set in the post-WWI era, this historical cozy will appeal to those who enjoy Frances Brody's Kate Shackleton and Kerry Greenwood's Phryne Fisher series.--Sue O'Brien Copyright 2019 Booklist
From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review
At the start of Ellicott's delightful third whodunit set in post-WWI England (after 2018's Murder Flies the Coop), Albert Simpkins, who does a little gardening work for prim and proper Edwina Davenport, has an argument with his brother-in-law, Hector Lomax, at a pub in the sleepy village of Walmsley Parva. The next day, Constable Gibbs arrives at Edwina's house and asks to see Simpkins, who has been living in her potting shed. Gibbs wants to question Simpkins about the murder of Hector, who's been found in the churchyard with his head bashed in. Edwina and her brash American friend, Beryl Helliwell, who have recently formed an investigative agency, set out to clear Simpkins's name. The two women keep several steps ahead of Gibbs as they discover that no one in Walmsley Parva is a bit sorry about Hector's untimely demise. Insights into the English class system of the day lend some depth to this light historical mystery. Witty prose, distinctive characters, and an enchanting setting all make for a winner. Agent: John Talbot, Talbot Fortune Agency. (Nov.)
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Review by Kirkus Book Review
Murder in yet another quaint English village.Although the Great War is over, good times have not yet returned to Walmsley Parva. Edwina Davenport's family once employed a staff of half a dozen; now she has to make do with Simpkins, an indifferent gardener she can sometimes cajole into digging up dahlias for wintering-over. Sharing the Beeches, her family estate, with American adventuress Beryl Helliwell has somewhat improved her financial situation, and the private enquiry agency that the two women operate does get an occasional case (Murder Flies the Coop, 2018, etc.). But their latest client, young Jack Prentice, seems unlikely to be able to pay much out of the pittance he earns hawking newspapers on the street. Still, the ladies want very much to help the lad clear his father, Frank, whom Constable Doris Gibbs has arrested for the murder of Simpkins' brother-in-law, Hector Lomax. Pretty much everyone in the village has a grudge against Lomax, including Simpkins himself, who further complicates the ladies' investigation because he's been left a controlling interest in Colonel Kimberly's Condiment Company by the recently deceased Colonel Kimberly himself. How a humble gardener came to inherit one of England's premier purveyors of chutneys, along with the truth about Lomax's unlamented demise, is revealed only at the tail end of this heaping helping of period English country charm.Pass the sriracha, please. Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.
Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.