Tuesday, January 09, 2024

Review: Death at a Scottish Wedding: A Scottish Isle Mystery by Lucy Connelly


Death at a Scottish Wedding by Lucky Connelly is the second book in the Scottish Isle Mysteries that began with An American in Scotland. It is October in Scotland and the good doctor is finding life in Sea Isle, Scotland, quite a bit colder and a lot snowier than her old Seattle neighborhood. It has been three months since she arrived and took over the medical practice. She loves the place and the people. The weather- not so much.

Not only is she the doctor, she is also the coroner. That means she works with the local constable of Sea Isle, Ewan Campbell. He is also the mayor, laird, and her host the next few days at his castle known as Morrigan Castle. It is one of his many family homes. It has at 94 rooms. It has a support staff and generators for power and should be a beautiful place for a wedding.

It was until folks started dying during a major snowstorm.

Cutoff from the world, what-follows is a locked room style cozy mystery read where while the wedding moves forward, it does take a backseat to the deaths. Deaths that are clearly murders. The question is who is killing and why?

Death at a Scottish Wedding is a fun mystery that is a good read, but could have been better. Nearly every chapter has a hook at the end to encourage the reader to move forward and continue reading. Numerous times the hook is having a character or characters hear a noise and then our heroine, or somebody else, screams from the fright. It is done so much, it become laughable. Amazingly, none of the screamers ever need a throat lozenge.

We are also told again and again that Ewan and good doctor don’t mix well with each other. We already very much know that from the first book. Clearly the ongoing annoyance will lead to romance. The only question is when. But, in the meantime, the fact that they clash is pounded ad nauseum in the first half of this book as is other repetitive information.

While the above issues are strong in the first half of the book, they eventually stop in the second half of the book as the pressure of the situation ramps up considerably. The reader is left with a good cozy mystery that easily could have been way better, but is pretty good overall.

As always, one should read the first book in a series. That fact is very true here. If one chooses to start here, understand the previous events are well detailed in the begging chapters of Death at the Scottish Wedding.


The Amazon Associate image purchase box is not working so please pick up your copy here

 

My reading copy came by way of the publisher, Crooked Lane Books, through NetGalley with no promise of a review.

 

Kevin R. Tipple ©2024

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