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MURDER AT MALLOWAN HALL by Colleen Cambridge

MURDER AT MALLOWAN HALL

by Colleen Cambridge

Pub Date: Oct. 26th, 2021
ISBN: 978-1-4967-3244-6
Publisher: Kensington

Finally it can be told: One of Agatha Christie’s most popular novels was inspired by a murder at her (fictional) manor house solved by her (fictional) housekeeper.

Since Phyllida Bright was a nurse’s aide during the Great War, she doesn’t turn a hair when she discovers the body of Charles Waring, stabbed in the neck with a fountain pen. The murder is a bit of an embarrassment, though, since Waring was a guest at Mallowan Hall, though an uninvited one who’d arrived only the night before, and since he doesn’t really work, as he’d claimed, for the Times of London (which first-time novelist Cambridge calls the London Times). The mystery of who killed him seems less impenetrable than the mystery of why archaeologist Max Mallowan and his wife, famed mystery writer Agatha Christie, would have given the interloper a bed for the night and asked him to dinner with their invited guests: Paul and Amelia Hartford, Odell and Dora Budgely-Rhodes, Geoffrey and Tana Devine, and two single gentlemen, Tuddy Sloup and Stan Grimson. But Phyllida, once she gets over her initial reaction (how will they clean up those bloodstains?), briskly gets down to it, searching the forgettable guests’ rooms for incriminating evidence, questioning the Mallowans’ 14 servants for further information, and preparing an elaborately self-serving denouement, all the while overlooking the disdain of DI Cork and the severely limited participation of Mrs. Agatha, who comes across as a scatterbrain mainly interested in mining the leading situation for her vastly more successful novel The Body in the Library.

Christie fans can expect a series. Don’t say you weren’t warned.