Lord James
Harrington and the New Year's Eve Mystery by Lynn Florkiewicz (Independently
published, November 2021) is the eleventh book in a gentle historical mystery series
set in a Sussex village in the late 1950s.
Lord James Harrington turned his inherited family mansion into a
high-end country hotel, which he runs with his wife Beth. It’s close enough to
London to be a desirable weekend jaunt and it’s quite successful. In
mid-December 1959 they visit Haywards Heath to see a Wild West touring show run
by two sisters, Jane and Shirley Johnson from Texas. It capitalizes on the rash
of Western television programming common during the late 1950s. Harrington’s is
hosting some of the cast over the weekend as they take a break between shows
and is offering a country and western evening in their honor. (The hotel’s
French chef is pained to be offering fried chicken and hot dogs to his guests.)
A collection of Native American artifacts on loan is accompanying the tour to
add interest and Harrington’s will be displaying it during the troupe’s stay.
A pretentious representative from the British Museum expresses interest
in the artifacts and an obnoxious member of the Foreign Office wants to buy the
lot outright. Someone tries to pick the lock on the case in the reception area
of Harrington’s one night, and a few days later one of the Johnson sisters is
killed in a clear homicide. Lord James and DCI George Lane work the case
together, as they have in earlier books, bringing it all together on New Year’s
Eve.
While this title trends cozier than those I usually pick up these days,
I found it highly readable. The story line is original, the writing is competent,
and the late 1950s timing is unusual. The country inn setting reminds me of the
Pennyfoot Hotel mysteries by Kate Kingsbury. The characters are pleasant if not
particularly well developed. There are a good many of them, and I had a hard
time keeping them all straight.
There is wonderful detail about holiday celebrations in 1950s England,
especially in a scene where James and Beth visit the shops in London to see the
Christmas displays and decorations.
These books are independently published and not apt to be part of a public library’s collection. Look for them on Amazon, the Kindle versions are quite affordable. Recommended for fans of historical cozies and students of mid-century fiction.
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ASIN: B09L1BM4V6
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Publication
date: November
3, 2021
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Language: English
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File size: 1523
KB
Aubrey Nye Hamilton ©2023
Aubrey Hamilton is a former librarian who works on Federal It projects by day and reads mysteries at night.
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