The snow-bound village…. and a Christmas-y Mystery


We’re into December, so it’s time for the annual Clothes in Books trope of Christmas in Books – seasonal scenes from random books, for no better reason than I like looking for the pictures, and I and some readers find them cheery and Xmas-y (particularly, of course, those featuring murders and other crimes). This one isparticularly recommended as a possible gift for the mystery-lover in your life

Many of the entries  - this year and in the past – were suggested by clever readers: so if you have a favourite please do let me know and I will try to use it


Miss Winter in the Library with a Knife by Martin Edwards

 

published 2025

 



“I let out a strangled cry of dismay… Moments later, the wavering beam of my torch fell on someone a short distance away… the person was wearing a red Santa Claus costume, carrying a sack over the shoulder and holding a torch in one hand and an ice axe in the other…”

 

Is there no end to Martin Edwards' talents? This is not a Rachel Savernake book, nor a magisterial work of non-fiction, nor a Lake District mystery, and it does not feature Harry Devlin (though one main character is called Harry and bears a certain resemblance…)

A new departure for everyone’s favourite mystery crime expert: this is a contemporary mystery set in a snow-bound Yorkshire village. Six guests have been invited to spend Christmas competing in a murder mystery game – “En route to the House-Party of Death” as I always like to call it -  and there are six people running the event.




We see a lot of the action via Harry Crystal’s journal – he is a failed crime writer – but also get a bird’s eye view of other people’s thoughts and conversations. And every so often we are given a puzzle to solve along with the guests, or a file of new information.  Every opportunity to join in the sleuthing, and that is the point of the book…




There is a death in the past that no-one wants to talk about. There is the invented crime story that the guests are supposed to solve. And, no surprise, there are people dying in real time. There’s only 12 people on site: how many will survive before the snow clears….?

This book is tremendous fun, and will make a great Christmas read, or a gift for the mystery lover in your life. That’s why I have done this post early in my Christmas collection, to give you a chance to buy it for Xmas…

Martin always plays fair, and indeed there is a Cluefinder at the back of the book to prove it. This is a Golden Age trope that he is reviving in his recent books – where he points out exactly where he gave you the clues to solve the crime, with page numbers.

There are many, many references and tipoffs to classic crime fiction, and it is most enjoyable to spot them. I did well at some aspect of the books and the various puzzles, but one major revelation was a complete surprise to me.

And – there is no character called Miss Winter, and no library. You’ll have to read the book to find out where the title comes from.

Santa is a Finnish stamp from Wikimedia Commons. The encounter described comes from very late in the book, though I hardly feel it is a spoiler.

Black and white picture shows a Canadian house in the snow, but I thought had a look of Midwinter Village.

 

 

Comments

  1. Great stuff and as you say perfect for the mystery-lover in your life. I very much enjoyed it and will be reviewing it myself at some point. Chrissie

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Oh good, I'll look out for it. we were lucky weren't we....

      Delete
  2. There's a short story collection called Campion at Christmas. I haven't read all four stories but one involves a house party!

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Is that a continuation book, completed by a different author? I'm not always a big fan of that, but a Christmas houseparty is always tempting!

      Delete
    2. They're all Allingham's work, I think, taken from other short-story collections. The Case of the Man With the Sack is the one I've read, about the Christmas house-party.

      Delete
    3. Right, there's two different books - one the collection you mention, exactly as you say, Campion at Christmas.
      There is another book called Mr Campion's Christmas, which was completed by Mike Ripley - so that's what I was thinking of!
      So thanks for the suggestion and I will pursue...

      Delete
  3. I knew you'd like this one very much, Moira. And to answer your question: No, there is no limit to what Martin Edwards is capable of creating. He is one of my inspirations.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. He's a marvel isn't he? We're lucky to have him in our world

      Delete
  4. I don't know if there's snow involved, but Murder Goes Mumming by Alisa Craig (Charlotte MacLeod) is set in Canada at Christmas, so at least it would be cold! The series detective, a Mountie named Madoc Rhys, and his fiancee Janet visit an isolated estate occupied by some strange characters. This series is a little grittier than some of MacLeod's other mysteries, but I think it might still be called a cozy.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. And I give you a post on it:
      https://clothesinbooks.blogspot.com/2017/12/xmas-activities-and-mumming.html
      in which I compare it, rather surprisingly, with Jane Austen's Mansfield Park.

      Delete
  5. Book that I haven't been able to locate online, but sounds intriguing--Another Little (Christmas) Murder by Lorna Nicholl Morgan. It's apparently set in December in Yorkshire but I'm not sure if it's really at Christmas, the title having been modified at some point. But the country house is named Wintry Wold!

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. I've read this - the main character is a travelling saleswoman who gets stranded at the country house when her car breaks down in a snowstorm. I don't remember much more about it, other than that it was fairly light-hearted and cosy, and I enjoyed it but not so much that I was tempted to buy a copy of my own.

      Sovay

      Delete
    2. I'd never heard of it, but it's one Kindle for 99p right now so I've downloaded it! Thanks, both

      Delete
  6. Martin Edwards, like Elly Griffiths, is a good novelist with whose work I struggle to click (on the fiction side - I have two or three of his non-fiction books on crime-writing). But as I've recently enjoyed EG's latest, I shall cross my fingers and give this one a try too.

    Sovay

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. It's quite different from his other crime novels, and is very seasonal!

      Delete

Post a Comment