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Murder in Abbot's Folly

Marsh And Daughter Mysteries, Book 8

#8 in series

ebook
3 of 3 copies available
3 of 3 copies available

In a crumbling Georgian mansion, the secret letters of Jane Austen provide a clue to a modern-day double murder for this father and daughter detective team.

Peter and Georgia Marsh, father and daughter investigators who specialize in cold cases, are looking forward to a Jane Austen-themed summer gala at Stourdens. It's said that the eighteenth-century manor house was the author's inspiration for her unfinished novel, The Watsons. It's here that a collection of Austen's never-published letters, pertaining to a mysterious love affair, are locked away. And most intriguing to Peter and Georgia, Stourdens is also the site of an unsolved murder, cold for nearly three decades.

As tourists and literary groupies descend on the property, tensions begin to stir among the mansion's volatile family. And when another murder occurs on the grounds, the Marshes are compelled to investigate. That means unearthing secrets both past and present—secrets that someone is willing to kill to protect. Especially pertinent to the case are those secret sentiments of a young woman whose heart was broken more than a hundred years ago.

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    • Kirkus

      January 1, 2012
      Though the father-daughter team of Peter and Georgia Marsh (Murder on the Old Road, 2011, etc.) specializes in cold cases, they don't expect one to go back as far as Jane Austen. Georgia is stressed by the return of her mother Elena, who walked out on Peter after an accident left him in a wheelchair. The old friend with whom Elena's staying invites them all to a gala at Stourdens, a local manor that sports a Jane Austen collection and an old murder case. The mansion's owner, Laura Fettis--joined by her husband and daughter Jennifer, Jennifer's fiancé and other hangers-on, including a filmmaker, an author, a caterer and Elena's friends, who live in an old inn--all have plans to exploit the connection with Jane Austen, especially the rumor that Jane based her unfinished novel The Watsons on a real-life love affair associated with the inn. The announcement of their plans is jeopardized when Laura says that she's changed her mind and then killed for good along with Laura herself. Georgia and Peter, warned off by the police, find that their investigation into the safe old murder is tied into the more volatile present-day killing. There are so many people with motives that the duo would have their hands full even if they weren't busy checking out the Austen memorabilia that may be at the center of the mystery. Though this installment drags a bit, Myers presents all the ingredients for an enjoyable read: historical interest, multiple suspects and a pair of likable sleuths.

      (COPYRIGHT (2012) KIRKUS REVIEWS/NIELSEN BUSINESS MEDIA, INC. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.)

    • Booklist

      December 1, 2011
      Peter and Georgia of Marsh & Daughter solve cold murder cases and then write books about them, published by Georgia's husband, Luke. The pair become interested in the 25-year-old death of Robert Luckhurst, who was killed in an eighteenth-century folly (a kind of decorative garden) at Stourdens, a decaying mansion in Kent. Peter and Georgia, drawn to the case even though Max Tanner was tried and convicted of the crime long ago, venture to Stourdens to nose around and to attend a gala celebrating all things Jane Austen. While there, the owner of Stourdens, Laura Fettis, is killed just as she is about to make an announcement concerning the mansion and her family's collection of Austen memorabilia. When a second murder occurs, Peter and Georgia begin to believe that the two contemporary crimes are connected to the historical murder. Augmenting the main mystery plot, Myers uses letters to weave a fictional romance between Austen and a dashing naval captain into the narrative. Sympathetic characters, plot twists, and the combination of history and detection make for an engaging story.(Reprinted with permission of Booklist, copyright 2011, American Library Association.)

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