The Hunting Party Author:Lucy Foley EVERYONE'S INVITED. EVERYONE'S A SUSPECT. AND EVERYONE'S TALKING ABOUT IT. — In a remote hunting lodge, deep in the Scottish wilderness, old friends gather for New Year. The beautiful one...The golden couple... The volatile one... The new parents... The quiet one... The city boy... The outsider... The victim. — Not an accident: a murde... more »r among friends.« less
It's a classic "English country house" murder mystery, although with more of a psychological suspense feel; there's no detective working to unravel the various alibis. Despite the jacket copy I wouldn't call it a thriller, the pacing is too deliberate for that. I found the first-person present-tense POV, shifting every chapter, mixed with one third-person POV, rather irritating. But we can tell from that structure who's important in the story and who can be disregarded. Foley gives only two sympathetic characters (IMO) which also helped me guess the murderer. It mostly unfolded the way I expected, but there were a few surprises, and although I didn't find it "un-put-down-able", it kept my interest.
If you read a lot of mysteries or thrillers, you've encountered this plot before: a bunch of spoiled, messed-up rich kids go off to a wilderness lodge, where they get snowed in with no help at hand. A crime occurs, maybe multiple crimes.
The book is suspenseful, but not original, and I found the male characters particularly not believable. Read this one on a train, on the beach or during a snow day.
Lots of characters doing lots of drinking, lots of "I was so drunk....". And not just regular old drunk. Drunk on 'Dom', that very expensive champagne we all guzzle down with our dear old friends. Despite an interesting story, this 'plot device' gets old. The lesson learned with this book, Don't drink so damn much.
Set around New Year's Eve, The Hunting Party by Lucy Foley was a nice contrast to the Christmas books I've been reading.
Ten years ago several Oxford students celebrated New Year's Eve together, and they've continued the annual tradition even as their group expanded through marriage, relationships, and children. This year they're gathering in a remote hunting lodge in the Scottish highlands to reconnect, eat good food, and drink to excess. Before their time together is complete, one of them is dead, and another may be the murderer.
I enjoy novels where the "big event" is disclosed fairly early and the rest of the story gradually fills in the details of the characters and events leading up to it, and that's the case here. Readers know a body has been found, but the gender isn't disclosed so we have to piece together clues to figure out who met their demise. I also like a fairly large cast of characters who have 'messy' relationships with each other, and a group of college chums is perfect fodder for this "trope." Many secrets are disclosed on this getaway.
I enjoyed this via audiobook with full cast narration by Imogen Church, Gary Furlong, Elle Newlands, Moira Quirk, and Morag Sims. Their lovely voices with rich accents put me firmly in the setting and helped me follow the characters.
I checked this out on audio from the library because I heard it compared to Agatha Christie's work. I was disappointed by the fact that you do not know who was murdered for quite a long time. After lots of red herrings and reveals, the ending was kind of simple.