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12 Reviews
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8 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
(3.5 stars) "What would a wedding be without a hitch or two?",
By Luan Gaines "luansos" (Dana Point, CA USA) - See all my reviews (TOP 500 REVIEWER) (VINE VOICE) (HALL OF FAME REVIEWER) (REAL NAME)
This review is from: The Cold Light of Mourning: A Mystery (Hardcover)
Living in a small town in North Wales, Canadian ex-pat Penny Brannigan enjoys an uneventful, but satisfying life, busy with her nail salon and an active interest in painting. Having recently lost her best friend, Penny is still grieving. Gathering the necessary tools from her nail salon, it is not surprising when Penny arrives at the funeral parlor to give her friend, Emma, one last manicure. Penny's nail salon is a hub of social gossip, especially with regular visits from the town busybody. But Penny becomes a more critical player in the town's drama when a bride goes missing before her wedding. A Londoner, Meg Wynne Thompson has planned to wed a wealthy local landowner's son, Emyr Gryffudd, in a formal afternoon ceremony. Penny is the last person to see the bride on the Saturday morning of the wedding; after her manicure, the bride-to-be leaves the shop and is not seen again. Everyone gathered at the church, the wedding party is disbanded, guests and participants at a loss for an explanation, although foul play is certainly considered. Detective Chief Inspector Gareth Davies is called in to head the investigation. Interviewing Penny as the last person to see Meg Wynne the morning of the wedding, Davies is unexpectedly charmed. Warming to his attentions, Penny becomes more intrigued with the fate of the disappeared bride and more interested than she will admit in the detective. The tale unfolds in a blend of romance and mystery, Penny collaborating with her latest acquaintance, harpist Victoria Hopkirk. The two middle-aged women engage in some amateur sleuthing that actually bears fruit, but in their enthusiasm, the ladies are careless of their own safety. Of course, the amateurs also attract the notice of the culprit. When Meg Wynne's body is discovered- thanks to Penny's intuition- DCI Davies has good reason to worry about her safety, A light tale that focuses as much on personalities and idiosyncrasies as the crime, the author captures the intimacies of small town life in the aftershock of unexpected events. There is no shortage of suspects to choose from, or eccentric characters, from the bride's alcoholic father to the stunned groom, not to mention the voluble Mrs. Lloyd, a regular visitor at Happy Hands Nail Care. Duncan has created a charming mix of incipient middle-aged romance and mystery, tea and sympathy, spiced with a touch of "Murder She Wrote". Luan Gaines/2009.
5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
interesting Welsh village police procedural,
This review is from: The Cold Light of Mourning: A Mystery (Hardcover)
Two and a half decades ago, manicurist Penny Brannigan left Canada to relocate in Llanelen, Wales where she opened a reasonable successful manicure shop. However, the usually calm Penny is a bit disturbed to learn Meg Wynne Thompson vanished just before she was to say I do to the squire's son. Her disappearance would mean nothing to Penny except the last known place she was seen was her manicure shop.
Though it may be a case of a runaway bride filled with trepidation, Detective Chief Inspector Gareth Davies does not rule out foul play and considers the wedding guests as potential suspects. Penny informs Gareth about the strange client whom she now believes was not Meg but someone pretending to be the missing woman. As the police arrest the fiancé whose father suddenly dies Meg and her buddy Victoria Hopkird begin asking questions that bring them to the attention of someone who prefers the case to stay the way the police see it; especially since Davies pays heed to Penny's tips. THE COLD LIGHT OF MOURNING is an interesting Welsh village police procedural with an amateur sleuth subplot. In some ways the star of the story line is Llanelen as Elizbath J. Duncan provides a vivid look at a seemingly remote sleepy rustic hamlet; this gives the mystery a cozy feel until the dramatic ending. Well written and the winner of the Minotaur/Malice Domestic Best First Traditional Mystery Novel award, fans of Welsh village mysteries will enjoy this tale and want more whodunits starring the hamlet, the two amateurs and the DCI. Harriet Klausner
6 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars
Disappointing,
By
This review is from: The Cold Light of Mourning: A Mystery (Hardcover)
I thought this book would be interesting because of its north Wales setting. At first it wasn't too bad, but Duncan's writing--and especially the plot--deteriorated quickly. She uses lots of adjectives in place of good writing; her characters are stock and unimaginative; and she has the romance writers' propensity to add an amateurish plastic sheen and polish to characters and setting: expensive brand names; characters slim and healthy; wealthy protagonists; silver this and platinum that. The book is trite, and you would have to be really bored to read it.
5 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
A Wonderful New British Mystery Series,
By
This review is from: The Cold Light of Mourning: A Mystery (Hardcover)
The Cold Light of Mourning is smoothly written and superbly paced,with a few good twists thrown in for good measure. The characters are likeable, there's humor, overall it's a very pleasant and entertaining book. I can't believe this is a first novel! Where has this author been hiding? I am looking forward to reading many more, as fast as they can be published. If you like the British cozy, you will love this novel. Very well written, I highly recommend this book.
2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Great first book in series,
By
This review is from: The Cold Light of Mourning: A Mystery (Hardcover)
I really enjoyed this book, I read it in 2 nites, had to make myself put it down at 2am first nite.
Great "main" characters, I am really looking forward to the book in series A Brush with Death due out end of July I hope this is the beginning of a long series - would love to see lots of books if they are as well written as the first Mary
2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Welsh country charm...and mayhem.,
By
This review is from: The Cold Light of Mourning: A Mystery (Hardcover)
I admit I always find something odd about the term "cozy mystery". Discovery of a dead body and the solving of a murder hardly seem like "cozy" fare to me. So what term to use for mysteries that focus less on gritty, dark details and instead on portraying the sheer humor and ordinariness of the human condition as well as the tragedy? I'd say: bloody good reading.
Duncan opens a new mystery series set in North Wales' beautiful River Conwy region with this entry, introducing Canadian ex-pat Penny Brannigan. A manicurist and amateur painter by trade, decidedly on the far side of forty, and frequently asked by British citizens where in America she hails from, Penny is an unusual and engaging heroine. As a long-term resident of Llanelen, she offers elements of both an insider's and outsider's perspective of the village, the Clwyd region, and the North Welsh people. Feeling the loss of her longtime best friend Emma Teasdale, the local schoolteacher, that story is soon old news in favor of the disappearance and murder of Meg Wynn Thompson, the elegant young fiancée of the local landowner's son. Penny, unlike most other sleuths, takes little interest in the case to begin and is only gradually and believably drawn into the investigation. Her common sense and observant nature provide some vital links to the case, as well as a few amusing scenes of eureka, much to the bewilderment of one of her long-term customers. As well, we're introduced to Detective Chief Inspector Gareth Davies, who investigates the bride's vanishing and finds much to admire in Penny as her intuition provides a vital break in the case. Their initial friendship and growing romance is quiet, subtle, a well-drawn and rather gentle sort of thing between two mature and likable people. It makes for a nice change from the frequent love/hate and tension-thick romance found in mysteries. "The Cold Light of Mourning" is a poignant sort of read, encompassing passion and murder, but also finding room for love, loss, friendship, and the gentle and unique charm of the Welsh country life. The story, in the end, is not as much about Meg Wynn and the circumstances of her murder so much as the ripples it creates in Llanelen and its people. So while I still need to find a good term for a mystery that focuses as much on the facts of living as those of dying, I highly recommend "Mourning" as a great debut read.
1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars
Could not bear to even finish this....,
This review is from: The Cold Light of Mourning: A Mystery (Hardcover)
I was truly disappointed with this book and finally determined that the high star ratings had to be written by this author's friends.
To say this was slow, the main character beyond boring and dull, as well as the surrounding townspeople, is putting it mildly. What I did manage to read, seemed simple, unoriginal and the bad guy...well let's just say very very obvious. Usually I donate my books to our local library, but I really want to spare people so this won't be a library sale book...
1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
A winning entry in the amateur sleuth category,
By
This review is from: The Cold Light of Mourning: A Mystery (Hardcover)
First Line: Emma Teasdale had been ill for some time and on a cool evening in early June, alone and peacefully, she died.
When visiting the market town of Llanelen in North Wales as a young student, Penny Brannigan was taken under schoolteacher Emma Teasdale's wing. They became fast friends, and Penny moved from Nova Scotia in Canada to Llanelen where she opened a small nail salon. As the years passed, the two women shared their lives with each other just as a mother and daughter might. Emma's death, although expected, has greatly shaken Penny, leaving her feeling at loose ends. Perhaps that's why she takes such an interest in the disappearance of bride-to-be Meg Wynne Thompson. Self-made Meg Wynne was about to be married to the local landowner, and townspeople didn't like her much. But when the young woman vanishes on the morning of her wedding and Penny is the last person to see her alive, Penny feels that she should do everything she can to help the police solve the mystery. Although the identity of the person responsible for Meg Wynne's disappearance was rather transparent to me, there was so much that I liked about this book that I didn't care. Starting out with the stock characters of a typical small town, Duncan has added layers to them and created a wonderful cast. Penny's troubled youth in Canada has made her an adult who prefers to be in her own company, but she is a genuinely observant and caring person. Detective Chief Inspector Gareth Davies and Detective Sergeant Bethan Morgan are the sort of police officers you want to show up in your town to look for a missing person. Davies in particular quickly learns to appreciate Penny's eye for detail. Penny isn't the typical amateur sleuth that she describes to friends: "What, you mean like those dotty middle-aged amateur lady sleuths that you see in books? Tramping all over the evidence, touching things they shouldn't, putting themselves in harm's way, and just generally annoying the police?" When she feels that she has something important that will help the police find Meg Wynne, she immediately calls them. It certainly is refreshing to have an amateur sleuth be level-headed and sensible, and it's fun to watch the inspector start to take a shine to her. Although the villain of the piece was easily guessed, what wasn't easy was figuring out how it was all done. Between the characters and the crime details, this was a very enjoyable, light mystery, and I look forward to meeting Penny again.
1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Great Start to a New Series,
By
This review is from: The Cold Light of Mourning: A Mystery (Hardcover)
This was a good cozy mystery and a great start to what will hopefully be a series. I liked that Penny & Victoria, our amateur detectives, are not the town busybodies and into everyone's business they are just everyday ladies that happen to figure things out.
The set-up for this is a bride disappears the day of her wedding has she runaway or has something happened to her. Penny & Victoria seem to be able to figure a few things out and tell the police who are happy to have the help since murders rarely happen in this quaint little Welsh town. Penny is also dealing with the recent death of her best friend and I enjoyed the budding friendship between her and Victoria and this first death really humanized Penny for me. The cast of characters are well thought out and the actual town busybody Mrs. Lloyd is always a step behind. There is a bit of romance towards the end but it is a nice mature courting going on which I enjoyed. Overall I enjoyed this book I think it's a good first novel and look forward to reading more by this author! 4 Stars
2 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars
Disappointing,
A Kid's Review
This review is from: The Cold Light of Mourning: A Mystery (Hardcover)
A very amateurish first effort. Not for those who prefer their mysteries densely plotted and their characters well developed.
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The Cold Light of Mourning: A Mystery by Elizabeth J. Duncan (Hardcover - April 28, 2009)
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