My First in Fethering
Murder in the Museum
by Simon Brett
Finished reading: October 22, 2008
Good read. This was my first book from this author who has written several mystery series. This one is from the Fethering Series, named for the English region where its two sleuths reside. I haven’t really gotten to know them yet, but am eager to get more acquainted. Carole, a retiree from the “Home Office” (must be an English thing I haven’t figured out just yet), seems to be the organized and analytical one–overly sensitive to order and the way she envisions her relationships should be. She is also a staunch defender and practitioner of the traditional English middle class ways. Jude is her free-spirited neighbor who delves into alternative therapies and seems to delight in occassionally thwarting Carole’s middle class morays. I would still like to understand their relationship a little better, but the arrival of an old friend of Jude was more the focus for this story. Regardless, these two make a great pair.
The story for this one centered around Chadleigh House, the family home (now a museum) of a well-known English writer who’s dark family secret begins unraveling with the discovery of a 40-year-old skull on the grounds. Another murder later, and I was rushing through to find out what would happen next. The characters and dialogue were interesting, not predictable. Although Mr. Brett did not include the vivid descriptions of the story’s locale and surroundings that I enjoy with other writers, his descriptions of the house’s “priest hole” where the Catholic priests would hide to evade authorities in the Church of England’s heyday were great–particularly the mechanics of how the rooms were concealed and opened. Of course, any mystery is made better by a secret room! The search for the mystery’s solution kept me rushing through. I’m excited to get another installment and get to know this place and this duo a little better.
I’m always interested in the new words that pop up in an English mystery–at least words that are new to me. In this one:
THRENODY — a song or hymn of mourning, composed as a memorial to the dead (according to Wikipedia). It was part of the title of the English author’s most famous poem.
Filed under Reading Journal | Comment (0)


















