What could have been a passable miscarriage of justice story is swamped by romantic nonsense involving two Bright (and unbearable) Young Things.
Things improved considerably with the appearance of Miss Silver, and I hoped, briefly, that the focus would shift from obnoxious Hilary and her idiotic beau Henry -- but no.
Didn't help that an already slim story was padded out by characters telling each other, in excruciating detail, every plot development that was described (in excruciating detail) in previous scenes ... The final 30 pages or so are an agony of repetition, in which we get a false confession (verbatim), a true confession (verbatim), and a blow by blow recap of what actually happened (just in case you had lost the will to live, and weren't paying attention)...
Not a writer I have any desire to try again.
Things improved considerably with the appearance of Miss Silver, and I hoped, briefly, that the focus would shift from obnoxious Hilary and her idiotic beau Henry -- but no.
Didn't help that an already slim story was padded out by characters telling each other, in excruciating detail, every plot development that was described (in excruciating detail) in previous scenes ... The final 30 pages or so are an agony of repetition, in which we get a false confession (verbatim), a true confession (verbatim), and a blow by blow recap of what actually happened (just in case you had lost the will to live, and weren't paying attention)...
Not a writer I have any desire to try again.
Geoffrey MUST have murdered his uncle-everyone else can prove they weren't there...
Very good book featuring Miss Maud Silver! Great British cozy mystery!
Just like reading Agatha Christie. It was written in 1937 and is every way a classic. I thought the personality of the heroine was too erratic for me. There were a lot of dreams and supposing that added nothing to the story, but to make it longer. Never the less, it was interesting to read a story that was written over 70 years ago.