Author: R.W. Green writing for M.C. Beaton
Published: October 8, 2024 by Minotaur Books
Format: Kindle, 256 Pages
Genre: Amateur Sleuth
Source: My thanks to Netgalley and the Publisher for the opportunity to read an advanced copy of this book.
Series: Agatha Raisin #35
First Sentence: “So this is where the murder was committed…” Agatha Raisin leaned against a wooden gate, craning her neck to peer into the meadow beyond.
Blurb: Life is never, ever dull in Agatha Raisin's sleepy Cotswolds village! Agatha Raisin's private detective agency is working flat out on a series of burglaries which take a violent turn when a friend of Agatha's is murdered during a raid on his antiques shop. Although determined to nail the villains, Agatha still makes time to help Sir Charles Fraith prepare to stage a massive, hugely glamorous event in the grounds of his ancestral home, Barfield House. When Agatha begins to receive death threats and narrowly avoids being abducted by kidnappers, she takes advantage of a previously arranged trip to Majorca to lie low for a while. There she meets her partner, former police officer John Glass, who is now working as a dance instructor on a cruise liner. Their relationship founders over John's apparent closeness to his stage dance partner, Louise. Putting her love life on hold, Agatha heads home, having worked out who has been threatening her life. Can Agatha track down the would-be killer, nail her friend's murderers and rescue her romance with John? Everything comes to a climax at the Barfield Extravaganza when on top of everything else, Agatha also manages to solve a 400-year-old Cotswold murder mystery!
My Opinion: This is one of those series that is an automatic read, regardless of the level of writing. Killing Time opens with a reference to a crime from the 1660s, leaving a shadowy tone that left me curious about where this book was going. The story then changes and quickly escalates with a series of current-day events: burglaries, riddles as death threats, a murder, an attempted kidnapping, vandalism, a clock, and relationship drama—all against the backdrop of planning a grand event for Charles’s Barfield wine business.
The usual characters are here, and I particularly enjoyed Bill Wong's and Gustav’s characters—Bill’s ability to handle Agatha, mingling with Gustav’s patient endurance of her antics, always makes me laugh.
Killing Time, while short, presents an engaging start with numerous plot points and dramatic turns. It features long chapters heavily packed with activity at the start, but the pace meanders as it progresses through the extensive plot points and then focuses on tying up loose ends. Despite this, the characters and the series' charm continue to draw me back.
Blurb: Life is never, ever dull in Agatha Raisin's sleepy Cotswolds village! Agatha Raisin's private detective agency is working flat out on a series of burglaries which take a violent turn when a friend of Agatha's is murdered during a raid on his antiques shop. Although determined to nail the villains, Agatha still makes time to help Sir Charles Fraith prepare to stage a massive, hugely glamorous event in the grounds of his ancestral home, Barfield House. When Agatha begins to receive death threats and narrowly avoids being abducted by kidnappers, she takes advantage of a previously arranged trip to Majorca to lie low for a while. There she meets her partner, former police officer John Glass, who is now working as a dance instructor on a cruise liner. Their relationship founders over John's apparent closeness to his stage dance partner, Louise. Putting her love life on hold, Agatha heads home, having worked out who has been threatening her life. Can Agatha track down the would-be killer, nail her friend's murderers and rescue her romance with John? Everything comes to a climax at the Barfield Extravaganza when on top of everything else, Agatha also manages to solve a 400-year-old Cotswold murder mystery!
My Opinion: This is one of those series that is an automatic read, regardless of the level of writing. Killing Time opens with a reference to a crime from the 1660s, leaving a shadowy tone that left me curious about where this book was going. The story then changes and quickly escalates with a series of current-day events: burglaries, riddles as death threats, a murder, an attempted kidnapping, vandalism, a clock, and relationship drama—all against the backdrop of planning a grand event for Charles’s Barfield wine business.
The usual characters are here, and I particularly enjoyed Bill Wong's and Gustav’s characters—Bill’s ability to handle Agatha, mingling with Gustav’s patient endurance of her antics, always makes me laugh.
Killing Time, while short, presents an engaging start with numerous plot points and dramatic turns. It features long chapters heavily packed with activity at the start, but the pace meanders as it progresses through the extensive plot points and then focuses on tying up loose ends. Despite this, the characters and the series' charm continue to draw me back.
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