Showing posts with label Allison & Busby. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Allison & Busby. Show all posts

Monday, October 27, 2025

Aubrey Nye Hamilton Reviews: Constable Country by Catherine Aird

  

Constable Country (Allison & Busby, 2023) is apparently the final book in the long-running British detective series by Catherine Aird (1930-1924) featuring Inspector Christopher Dennis Sloan of the fictional Berebury CID department in West Calleshire, England. Known as “C.D.” which invariably is pronounced “Seedy”, Sloan is generally accompanied by a clueless constable named Crosby, to whom Sloan has been unable to teach much of anything. Sloan reports to Superintendent Leeyes, irritable, demanding, and of no assistance during an investigation. Leeyes frequents the local Adult Education classes and is prone to quoting odd bits of information from the latest class that may or may not be relevant to the subject at hand. His adversarial approach to hearing about new topics has been known to get him booted out of class, leaving Leeyes to fulminate about the uninformed instructor.

Michael Wakefield, part owner of the high-end printing firm Forres and Wakefield, learns the day before the annual accounting audit of the books that the company he has worked so hard to establish is bankrupt. He had no idea that his partner Malcolm Forres has been systematically embezzling for years. With a new accountant onboard who was sure to report the defalcations, Forres emptied the bank accounts and fled to Europe in the middle of the night, leaving Wakefield facing a mountain of debt and looming bankruptcy.

While Sloan does not understand white collar crime and prefers a straightforward burglary, he knows embezzlement is illegal and begins to delve into bank statements and to interview the accountants. A day after Forres absconded, despite the stress, Wakefield focused on printing and binding the Earl of Ornum’s latest book in time to deliver copies for the launch party two days later. The books were produced and a sample was delivered by the firm’s apprentice Lenny Datchet to Ornum House, where the earl’s outrageously flirtatious twin daughters demanded rides on Lenny’s motorbike. In return, they invited Lenny to the launch party.

The morning after the party Lenny was found dead in one of the guest rooms in Ornum House, expanding the scope of the Forres and Wakefield investigation. The attempted murder of another of the peripheral players further confuses everyone.

Sloan is practical and focused as always here and navigates between the unhelpful Leeyes and the clumsy Crosby to a successful conclusion. The solution is innovative and the motive unexpected. The pieces mostly fall together nicely once Sloan sorts them out, although I found a couple of plot questions unanswered.

A pleasant traditional mystery of which I find far too few of these days. I would like to think that another three or four books in the series are lurking in Aird’s papers somewhere but I suspect we would have heard about them by now. So I will have to content myself with re-visiting the earlier adventures of Sloan and his colleagues in Calleshire County occasionally.

Followers of the series will not want to miss this one. Readers new to Catherine Aird should start with an earlier title.



 

·         Publisher: Allison & Busby

·         Publication date: June 22, 2023

·         Language: English

·         Print length: 320 pages

·         ISBN-10: 0749030755

·         ISBN-13: 978-0749030759

 

 

Amazon Associate Purchase Link:  https://amzn.to/43jvxnh

 

 

Aubrey Nye Hamilton ©2025

Aubrey Hamilton is a former librarian who works on Federal It projects by day and reads mysteries at night.

Monday, June 26, 2023

Aubrey Nye Hamilton Reviews: Skelton's Guide to Blazing Corpses by David Stafford


The third book in the Skelton’s Casebook series by David Stafford is a fine follow-up to the excellent second title, reviewed earlier on Kevin’s Corner: https://kevintipplescorner.blogspot.com/2022/05/aubrey-nye-hamilton-reviews-skeltons.html. Skelton's Guide to Blazing Corpses (Allison & Busby, 2022) is set in 1930 and follows the career of barrister Arthur Skelton, who has the reputation of salvaging the most hopeless of defenses.

Here the hopeless defense is of Tommy Prosser, who stands accused of bashing Harold Musgrave over the head and then setting him and his automobile on fire on Guy Fawkes Night. There was no real evidence against Prosser, the local bad guy, the police simply found charging him a quick way to close the case. Skelton’s innate sense of fairness was outraged.

Musgrave’s life did not bear close scrutiny. He was a known bigamist and was facing multiple paternity suits. At least six other women came forward to claim relationships with him. Each of them had an entertaining story to tell, as Musgrave was nothing if not creative. One lady believed that Musgrave was engaged on secret work for the air ministry, another thought he was a location scout for the movie star Tom Mix, a third understood Musgrave was tracking down Russian spies, and a fourth gathered he was working for a Romanian philanthropist. Skelton considered all of the people who had been taken in by the deeply dishonest Musgrave, decided the list of potential suspects in his murder to be legion, and set out to free Prosser.

A second case deals with the cardiac death of a middle-aged lady induced, the coroner believed, by an electric shock treatment provided by a “medical electrician”, who was promptly arrested for manslaughter. His solicitor sent the brief on to Skelton to handle.

On a personal level Skelton’s wife has given up flying and is now focusing on politics; she is a fervent Communist. His clerk Edgar has become engrossed with interior design and the decoration of his new flat. In many ways Skelton simply serves as a straight man for the eccentric people that surround him.

The acknowledgements mention Stafford’s illness during the writing of this book, when his wife Caroline took over, which may account for some small discrepancies in continuity throughout. While the writing is as witty and clever as in its predecessor volumes, some of the plot points are not as neatly wrapped up as they could have been. Still, this is a fine piece of historical fiction, the setting is wonderfully realized and the resolution of Musgrave’s murder is neatly handled. For mystery readers who like humor wrapped around historical settings and sound plots. Recommended.


 

·         Publisher: Allison & Busby (July 21, 2022)

·         Language: English

·         ISBN-10: 0749027142

·         ISBN-13: 978-0749027148


Aubrey Nye Hamilton ©2023

Aubrey Hamilton is a former librarian who works on Federal It projects by day and reads mysteries at night.

Monday, May 23, 2022

Aubrey Nye Hamilton Reviews: Skelton's Guide to Suitcase Murders by David Stafford


I seldom burble about books, having read too many to think that they are all exceptional, but I find myself burbling about the second book in the Skelton’s Casebook series by David Stafford. I cannot remember who was so ecstatic about the first book that I felt compelled to find the sequel but I located Skelton's Guide to Suitcase Murders (Allison & Busby, 2021) and was straightaway enthralled.

Set in 1929, this series follows the career of barrister Arthur Skelton, who had the reputation of salvaging the most hopeless of defenses. In this book a woman’s corpse is found in a suitcase and her husband, an Egyptian doctor, is accused of killing her. She was believed to have been straying from the marriage, and potentially incriminating materials are found in their home. There was no real evidence against the doctor and the condition of the corpse was such that identity could not be categorically proven. However, the doctor appeared to be on his way to the gallows from sheer xenophobia. Skelton and his clerk Edgar Hobbs are determined to do their best to save him.

In addition to this major homicide case, Skelton is defending a man accused of knowingly driving a truck full of stolen peacock feathers. He is also defending a young tearaway charged with burglarizing a factory and setting it on fire to cover up his depredations. His novel approaches to both cases are mesmerizing.

On the home front, Skelton has another set of challenges. His wife is determined to buy an airplane and fly it to Australia. His father is newly retired from his job and is at a loss as to what to do with himself. He is sad and depressed, sitting in his chair all day long.

This tale gently parodies the classic mysteries of the Golden Age while delivering a cracking good puzzle. The witty writing and deliciously eccentric characters are icing on the cake. The thread about a guinea pig named Primrose Moorfield is worth the price of the book all by itself.

Like the Bryant and May books, this mystery captures the flavor of the time beautifully. Again like Bryant and May, there are periodic data dumps of incredibly esoteric information. I now know more about peacock feathers than I ever thought possible. The tongue-in-cheek narrative has a spot-on sense of comedic timing, no doubt gathered from Stafford’s theatre experience.

This book is utterly delightful and I cannot recommend it highly enough.



·         Publisher:  Allison & Busby (September 23, 2021)

·         Language:  English

·         Paperback:  352 pages

·         ISBN-10:  0749026987

·         ISBN-13:  978-0749026981

 

Aubrey Nye Hamilton ©2022

Aubrey Hamilton is a former librarian who works on Federal It projects by day and reads mysteries at night.