A Murder at the Castle
A gripping and cosy murder mystery for fans of The Windsor Knot and Knives Out
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- 4,49 €
Descrizione dell’editore
The perfect murder mystery for fans of THE WINDSOR KNOT, KNIVES OUT and THE THURSDAY MURDER CLUB.
King Eric is dead. And when the motive is succession, murder is a family affair. . .
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During a violent snowstorm, the Royal Family gather at the Castle for a traditional Christmas together. Amid rumours that he plans to name a new successor, King Eric stands to make his traditional after-dinner speech. He sips from a glass of his favourite whisky- and drops dead.
The king has been poisoned, and only one of the royals could have done the deed. Trapped by the raging blizzard, it is up to Eric's beloved head chef, Jonathan Alleyne, to play detective and get to the bottom of this heinous crime.
Jon is determined to expose the truth, even if it puts him in grave danger, and threatens to shake the entire monarchy to its core...
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Readers are LOVING A Murder at the Castle:
'This is a fantastic mystery . . . It will keep you guessing until the end!' FIVE STARS
'One of my favourite books I've read this year! The plot zips along at lightning speed' FIVE STARS
'What a fun, fast paced read! I stayed up all night reading it' FIVE STARS
'I recommend this book for all mystery lovers, it's the perfect red herring mystery' FIVE STARS
'This is one of the best page-turners that I've read in a long while . . . I think this is Chris' best book yet' FIVE STARS
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
In this locked room mystery with echoes of Agatha Christie, British author McGeorge (Now You See Me) delivers a droll if disappointing look at a fictional royal family, whose members have gathered to celebrate a traditional Christmas at Balmoral Castle located in the remote Scottish Highlands. All the royals, a mixed bag of egos, have been made to hand over their mobile devices, and are soon cut off from the outside world by a huge blizzard. King Eric Windsor has sent all servants and staff home, demanding that the only people to be present are his family; his smarmy security "juggernaut," Tony Speck; and his loyal personal chef, Jonathan Alleyne. The 85-year-old king plans to make an important announcement that will affect the monarchy. But as he begins to describe his proposal during a toast, he drops dead from drinking poisoned whiskey. Mouth-watering scenes of the chef cooking make up only in part for an uninspired plot, a ho-hum resolution, and characters that are stock types, aside from Jonathan. McGeorge has done better.