One of these days there is again going to be a new
review from me. This is not that day. Barry is back to save FFB here on the
blog again this week. Make sure you check out the full list at Patti Abbott’s blog. Stay hydrated,
my friends.
DEATH OF A SNOB (1992)
by M.C. Beaton
Reviewed by Barry
Ergang
It’s Christmas in the
Scottish Highlands and Hamish Macbeth, police constable of the village of
Lochdubh, is miserable indoors with a head cold while a snowstorm rages outdoors.
He’s equally miserable because he’s been looking forward to spending the
holiday with his parents, who have “moved to a croft house and land near
Rogart.” Other family members will be there as well, among them his Aunt Hannah—and
there’s the rub. “Aunt Hannah,” you see, “was a fat-loud-mouthed harridan who
loathed Hamish. But she had been generous to the not-too-comfortably-off
Macbeths with presents of money and gifts for Hamish’s little brothers and
sisters. Never anything for Hamish. She loathed him and never tired of saying
so.”
“Ever since you put that
mouse down her back when you were eight, she’s never been fond o’ you,” his
mother reminds him, and Hamish understands that his attendance at the
festivities, which will potentially prove remunerative for his parents, would
be looked upon with less-than-sanguine eyes—especially Hannah’s. She is
arriving on December 20th, so Hamish promises that if the head cold doesn’t
kill him, he’ll drop off presents before then.
He’s barely back in bed
when Priscilla Halburton-Smythe, “once the love of his life, until Hamish had
grown heartily sick of the weight of the torch he was carrying for her,” shows
up at his door. She’s there to ask that Hamish give some advice to her friend
Jane Wetherby, and Hamish agrees to see Jane the following day. The tall
attractive woman who shows up is wearing “a thin white blouse plunged at the
front to a deep V” that she tends to emphasize, inadvertently or otherwise, by
leaning forward when she speaks intently. She fears that someone might be
trying to kill her. Her suspicion is based on a couple of potentially fatal accidents—or
were they merely unfortunate incidents?—which
have recently occurred.
Jane is the proprietor of
“a health farm called The Happy Wanderer on the island of Eileencraig….‘I not
only teach people how to have a healthy body but how to get in touch with their
innermost feelings.’” When she explains that a villager read her tea leaves and
said someone was trying to kill her, she “began to worry about my guests.”
As you can easily imagine,
Hamish becomes one of the guests.
The farm is closed for the
winter, so the guests are friends Jane has invited to spend Christmas with her.
They include two married couples, Jane’s ex-husband, and Harriet Shaw, a woman
who writes cookbooks and to whom Hamish finds himself attracted despite their
age difference. One of these people is the titular snob, and the others are
among the suspects Hamish must contend with while also clashing with the local
constabulary.
Death of a Snob is the sixth title in the Hamish Macbeth series but the first that I’ve
read. I’m not sure I ever would have were it not for a longtime friend of mine
who is an equally voracious reader, and who told me he’d enjoyed several titles
in the series which—like this one—are short, quick, and diverting reads. M.C.
Beaton excels at characterizations, particularly through dialogue, and
atmosphere, especially when depicting the tensions among the Christmas guests
at the health farm and the hostility of the Eileencraig islanders toward
strangers. She’s also quite skilled at conveying a gentle kind of humor.
With the caveat that you
avoid the epub edition I read as being obnoxiously riddled with typos and other
problems in both narrative and dialogue, I can readily recommend it. Unfortunately,
I can’t recall where I acquired this
particular epub edition, so you’re on your own in that respect.
© 2017 Barry Ergang
Some of Derringer Award-winner Barry Ergang’s work is available at Amazon and Smashwords.com
Some of Derringer Award-winner Barry Ergang’s work is available at Amazon and Smashwords.com
3 comments:
I have at least a dozen M.C. Beatons on my shelves. Your fine review makes me want to drop everything and read one!
Thanks, George. If you haven't read any of her work yet, I think you'll enjoy it, just as I did.
I also don't think I've read any, though I'll have to take a look at the list of titles to see if any ring the dim bell of memory. These sound like just the thing to divert me from both the heat and politics.
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