A Man Lay Dead
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3.9 • 87 Ratings
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- $9.99
Publisher Description
Crime comes to a country house: "Any Ngaio Marsh story is certain to be Grade A, and this one is no exception." —The New York Times
This classic from the Golden Age of British mystery opens during a country-house party between the two world wars—servants bustling, gin flowing, the gentlemen in dinner jackets, the ladies all slink and smolder. Even more delicious: The host, Sir Hubert Handesley, has invented a new and especially exciting version of that beloved parlor entertainment, The Murder Game . . .
"It's time to start comparing Christie to Marsh instead of the other way around." —New York Magazine
"A peerless practitioner of the slightly surreal, English-village comedy-mystery." —Kirkus Reviews
Customer Reviews
House guest dies while playing “Murder”
The first book in the Roderick Alleyn series introduces us to Roderick Alleyn, a detective from Scotland Yard. The story revolves around the murder of a house guest at a country house where the guests are participating in a parlor game called “Murder.” When the lights come back on, there is a real victim and a real murderer.
There is a side plot that muddies the plot a bit, but all the guests have somewhat of an air-tight alibi, except, of course, for the murderer. The solution — that is, how the crime was committed — may seem a little far-fetched, but it was fun watching Roderick solve the mystery.
A Man Lay Dead
An ok read.
Like Agatha Christie!
I didn’t pick the murderer, but like Christie, it could go many ways and the author picks one. I like the sleuth being a sometimes sensitive detective with anxiety and memory problems and being a policeman he has to stay within the confines of the law. Good book!