Murder Most Royal
A Novel
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- $14.99
Publisher Description
"One imagines Christmas at the royal family’s country house at Sandringham Estate bustling with drama, but Bennett’s version raises the stakes... Bennett charmingly portrays relationships between royal family members." — Washington Post
Evidence that an aristocrat has gone missing—and was possibly murdered—near Sandringham House sets Queen Elizabeth II on the path to discover unsavory family secrets and much more in this new installment of the series the New York Times Book Review calls “sheer entertainment.”
Queen Elizabeth II is looking forward to a traditional Christmas gathering with her family in Sandringham when a shocking discovery interrupts holiday plans. A severed hand has been found—but even more unsettling, she recognizes the signet ring still attached to a finger. It belongs to a scion of the St Cyr family, her old friends from nearby Ladybridge Hall. Despite the personal connection, the Queen wants to leave the investigation to the police—that is, until newspapers drag her name into the matter.
As reporters speculate about the proximity of the crime to the Crown and the police fail to investigate a suspicious accident on her doorstep, Elizabeth quietly begins to mull over the mystery herself. With help from her Assistant Private Secretary, Rozie Oshodi, she delves into the interlocking layers of fact and fiction surrounding the high-profile case. Someone in the quiet county of Norfolk seems to have a secret worth killing for, and the Queen is determined to find out who and what that is—even if that means discovering that someone in her close circle is a murderer.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
Bennett's witty third Windsor family-focused cozy (following 2021's A Three Dog Problem) finds Queen Elizabeth II entering amateur sleuth mode during a 2016 Christmas gathering at Sandringham Estate. Shortly after the royal family arrives, a severed hand washes up on a nearby beach. With a glance at the police photos, the Queen identifies the victim—based on his distinctive signet ring—as Edward St. Cyr, a boyhood friend of Prince Charles. The personal connection draws her into the investigation, assisted by her faithful secretary, former army officer Rozie Oshodi. As Rozie and the Queen dig deeper, they stumble on long-buried family secrets they'll have to bring to light if they want to catch a killer. True to cozy form, Bennett tosses a number of frothy detours into the mix—organic farming tips, a fox hunt, and a trip to the Royal stables among them—but none detract from the sturdiness of the core mystery. Bennett is excellent at capturing the Queen's poise and patience as she sifts through layers of protocol, and there's plenty of fun to be had in eavesdropping on imagined conversations among the real-life royals—particularly Prince Philip, who was not one to mince words. Anglophiles will be in heaven.