Whew. What a year.
Lallie Thompson-Bates, a day girl from the second form, was telling anyone who would listen that her mother had spoken to a close friend who had seen a woman looking very much like Miss Bell in a shop in Abingdon, buying azaleas. Another girls who knew all about the language of flowers said that azaleas meant ‘Take care!’, and there was great excitement at that — until Lallie admitted that she had meant to say hydrangeas. Since hydrangeas turned out to mean ‘frigidity’, this did not seem right at all.
“[A]lthough in books they might have done it by constructing a dastardly long-range missile out of a trombone, three plant pots, and the gym vaulting horse, in real life that sort of thing does seem beyond the bounds of possibility.”
The Murder Most Unladylike books by Robin Stevens:
Novels
2. Arsenic For Tea (2015)
3. First Class Murder (2015)
4. Jolly Foul Play (2016)
5. Mistletoe and Murder (2016)
6. A Spoonful of Murder (2018)
Novellas and Collections
2. The Case of the Deepdean Vampire (2016) [ebook novella]
3. Cream Buns and Crime [ss] (2017)
4. The Case of the Missing Treasure (2018) [Waterstones exclusive novella]
These sound absolutely delightful and the small samples of the text you included certainly seem like my sort of thing. I will have to try to seek these out for myself.
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Do! It really was First Class Murder that got me started on my whole YA detection kick, and these books — on, admittedly, only the two I’ve read — walk the line between detection and youthfulness perfectly. Man, if this sort of thing had been available when I was 11 I’d’ve read about ten times as much as I have and be a genre expert by now…kids today don’t know they’re born, etc, etc.
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I absolutely love this series. I’m hoping to get round to the newest one soon. Have you tried Katherine Woodfine’s Sinclairs’ Mysteries series? I reviewed the last couple on my blog and think I like Sophie and Lil even more than Hazel and Daisy.
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Having now gone back to the start I’m some way off A Spoonful of Murder, but I intend to get there before too long. And I understand the next one is due out in October…man, too many books and too many bills requiring me to stay in my job.
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October?? Eek.
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Thanks for the review, which reminded me that I needed to get down to reading one of Robin Steven’s mysteries. I purchased ‘First-Class Murder’ when you first reviewed it, but perhaps this might be an even better place to start, as I grew up enjoying boarding school novels very much. Then again, I’m not sure about mixing the genres of murder and boarding school in my mind: ‘Cat among Pigeons’ was not my favourite Christie for precisely that reason.
I was going to comment that I’d read ‘London Eye Mystery’, but I believe Robin Stevens only came into the picture with the subsequent entry in the series?
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Indeed, Robin Stevens wrote The Guggenheim Mystery following the death of Siobhan Dowd, who had left that title in her notes as her intended follow-up to The London Eye Mystery.
There’s a risk this could run a Cat Among the Pigeons vibe, I know what you mean, but it’s much more about the character of the school and the attitudes and behaviour of the young people — and their perceptions of the behaviour of the adults — than the Christie title was. Similarities may scream out to others, but this is far more accomplished to my way of thinking, even if the similarities end at the setting and the fundamentals of the plot.
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Yes, wasn’t it a rather fun read? I’m glad I bought the first three at the same time so I still have two to enjoy (and that’s not even counting Stevens’ sequel to “The London Eye Mystery”).
Spoiler-ish content below:
So, how about the culprit? Is it fair that the culprit is never suspected by Wells & Wong until very late in the game and therefore we readers aren’t wholly provided with clues that could make us figure it out?
Or perhaps it was just me who realised too late that there should be other suspects than the ones W&W list. 🙂
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There is a point where one alibi is destroyed fairly early on, and I really should have realised that two alibis were being destroyed. I think that was pretty fair, and definitely my fault for not considering it properly, even if actual evidence confirming the guilt doesn’t properly crop up until much later.
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I have one of the Woodfines sitting on my shelf, recommended by a bookseller who didn’t carry Stevens’ books; she said KW wrote capers rather than mysteries.
I think Stevens’ books are fine. You can see that she doesn’t mind her solutions having an effect on her young heroines. I also love Hazel – much more than I like the insufferable Daisy, I’m afraid. But that’s girls for you!
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There is an air of consequences, you’re right. Something in Book 2 is hanging over Book 3 (nothing spoilery, so I still have to find out what it is…), and I like that — the idea of consequence-free murder and desolation is fine in puzzle plotting from the 1930s, but there should be at least some kind of “lol, IRL” aspect to YA fiction. Though maybe that’s the reactionary in me…reacting.
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