After the Armistice Ball

· Hachette UK
4.5
2 reviews
Ebook
304
Pages
Eligible
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About this ebook

A classic murder-mystery set among the struggling upper classes of 1920s Perthshire as, in the aftermath of the First World War, their comfortable world begins to crumble.

Dandy Gilver, her husband back from the War, her children off at school and her uniform growing musty in the attic, is bored to a whimper in the spring of 1923 and a little light snooping seems like harmless fun. Before long, though, the puzzle of what really happened to the Duffy diamonds after the Armistice Ball has been swept aside by a sudden, unexpected death in a lonely seaside cottage in Galloway. Society and the law seem ready to call it an accident but Dandy, along with Cara Duffy's fiancé Alec, is sure that there is more going on than meets the eye.

What is being hidden by members of the Duffy family: the watchful Lena, the cold and distant Clemence and old Gregory Duffy with his air of quiet sadness, not to mention Cara herself whose secret always seems just tantalizingly out of view? Dandy must learn to trust her instincts and swallow most of her scruples if he is to uncover the truth and earn the right to call herself a sleuth.

Ratings and reviews

4.5
2 reviews
Alison Robinson
December 29, 2020
Having read an ARC of the latest Dandy Gilver book I was interested enough to go back to the very beginning and see where it all began. The year is 1922, Dandy Gilver is invited to her friend Daisy's annual Armistice Ball, an event which has become increasingly tense as Daisy and her husband Silas Esslemont seem oblivious to the penury of their guests and blithely raise funds for charity, pondering whether to decline this year Dandy is called by Daisy herself with a garbled request for assistance. There has been some unpleasantness involving Mrs Lena Duffy and her fabulous diamonds, she claims that the diamonds were stolen when she stayed the night at the Esslemont's house (albeit not discovered until much later) and is demanding that Silas' insurance company pays up, despite a little irregularity with the premiums. Daisy wants Dandy to find out what really happened to the diamonds, before Mrs Duffy follows through on her threat to disclose some unnamed secret to the world. At first Dandy doesn't know who to believe, is Silas being unreasonable and a bit common in hiding behind the rules of the insurance company, one which he owns? Or is Mrs Duffy asking him to commit fraud? How were the diamonds taken out of the safe several times since the stay at the Esslemont's without anyone realising that they were fake? Why did Mrs Duffy's younger daughter Cara take the diamonds to a strange jeweller to be valued rather than to the family jeweller? I won't divulge anything further, suffice it to say that the theft leads to a murder in which Dandy becomes embroiled. I enjoyed watching her theorise one way and then another, I absolutely hate it when the detective just delivers the culprit as a fait accompli - at school we were always told to show our workings LOL. I did guess the murderer and the motive, sort of, but I really enjoyed the way the threads were unravelled and that Catriona McPherson didn't actually spell out the truth at all - it was all left to the reader to deduce. If you are a fan of historical detective stories featuring the upper classes, if not actually the aristocracy, such as Ashley Weaver's Amory Ames, or Allison Montclair's Sparks and Bainbridge, or Anna Lee Huber's Verity Kent series then I think you will love these as well. Off to book 2.
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About the author

Catriona McPherson was born near Edinburgh in 1965, the youngest of four daughters, and was educated at Edinburgh University. She then worked for five years as a lecturer in the English department of Leeds University before fleeing academia almost completely. Catriona now teaches part time for the Open University and spends the rest of her time writing. She lives on a farm in a beautiful valley in Galloway.

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