
Murder on Mustique
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Get 2 free audiobooks during trial.
Buy for $24.19
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Narrated by:
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Ben Bailey Smith
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Harriet Walter
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Jane Collingwood
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By:
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Anne Glenconner
A storm. A disappearance. A race against time....
Mustique is in a state of breathless calm as tropical storm Cristobal edges towards it across the Atlantic. Most villa owners have escaped the island but a few young socialites remain, unwilling to let summer's partying end. American heiress Amanda Fortini is one such thrill-seeker - until she heads out for a morning swim and doesn't return.
Detective Sergeant Samuel Wilton is just 28 years old and the island's only fully trained police officer. He quickly realises he needs to contact Lord and Lady Innerleithen, who bought the island decades ago and have invested time, money and love creating a paradise. Jasper is in St Lucia designing a new village of luxury villas but Lady Veronica (Vee to her friends) catches a plane immediately. Her beloved god-daughter, Lily, is on the island, and this disappearance has alarming echoes of what happened to Lily's mother many years ago. Lady Vee would never desert a friend in need, and she can keep a cool head in a crisis.
When Amanda's body is found, a murder investigation begins. Wilton knows the killer must be an islander because flights and ferry crossings have stopped due to the storm warning, but the local community isn't co-operating. And then the storm hits and someone else disappears.
©2020 Anne Glenconner (P)2020 Hodder & Stoughton LtdListeners also enjoyed...




















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Exciting, mystery on Mustique!
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Murder on Mustique is actually quite a good quality murder mystery--not a classic, but well-crafted and suspenseful, with enough hints and false leads to keep the reader guessing until the surprising reveal. I would not classify it as a cozy; the quality of writing and depth of characterization lift it above that level.
What makes this murder mystery different from others, and therefore a bit tricky to review, is that it hasn't quite decided whether it is memoir or fiction. "Lady Veronica's" voice is indistinquishable from Lady Anne's in "Lady in Waiting", and they share the same history of developing Mustique while taking care of Princess Margaret. (And yes, she does mention the Princess several times, especially while establishing the characters, but then only occasionally in the rest of the book.)
I just decided not to let this bother me, and was quickly engrossed in the story. Clearly, Lady Vee is Lady Anne, and her background of upper-class privilege--including her closeness with the royal family--might rankle some, especially when contrasted with the poverty of many of the islanders. Yet she is also clearly a loving, caring woman who, while a product of her time and place, respects people from all walks of life.
I thoroughly enjoyed the narrators and I was sorry when I got to the end. I will definitely get the next book, if this is a series.
Very good mystery, plus unique Mustique atmosphere
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Good read
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Anne Glenconner is a consummate story teller.
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The other narrators are fine, the British aristocrat accents warm, round, and soothing where you would want them to be—not sharp and harsh at all. The other female accents are... mistaken. I had to be told a character was purely Canadian, and not some exotic Eastern European. The Americanisms are utter fails: Americans do not say, for example, “Monday, Eighteenth June.” That is simply incorrect in American English.
The native culture is treated respectfully and from a distance, which is appreciated. There isn’t appropriation or fetishization. The one character born on the islands who is in a narrative position was raised in London, which neatly prevents Lady Glenconner from stepping into territory beyond her. The themes the islanders are seen as experiencing are either universal or location-specific, and a delicate line is toed: the author does want to write an inclusive book with local characters, but doesn’t want to explicitly speak for any real-world sentiments that might be felt by them, and this is accomplished with little awkwardness. Time will tell whether it was handled satisfactorily.
The plot is just fine for what I’d like on a cozy murder mystery. This is a fun take on that subgenre, because we have the beautiful islands as a backdrop. There are times when the reader does struggle to empathize with the lavishness of the island’s guests, but the author is aware of this, and it’s mentioned. A bit of escapism is fine, and the main protagonist is lovable, in my opinion, and again, self-aware of her white savior potential, and trying to avoid it. The writing is speedy, clean, and enjoyable, with the exception of a few blue lines like, “the moon looked down with apathy.”
More difficult to empathize with is the protagonist’s adoration of Princess Margaret. We are told such factoids as Margaret hating the sensation of sand. It is explained how much joy it brought our protagonist to keep linens available to immediately wash Margaret’s feet for her after every dip. This is supposed to be a sunny and sweet recollection, but it comes across just as horrifying as learning that Prince Charles has his toothpaste put on his brush for him every morning by a butler who uses a paste-squeezing silver key bearing the Prince of Wales feathers. It’s truly nothing short of disgusting, Royal or not, as opposed to being something special, of note. While absurd privilege is called out in the book, it is also celebrated as something that might one day unfortunately pass and must be remembered for posterity. Yikes.
I would 100% recommend the book and read her next book. I hope she writes one.
Greater than the sun of its parts
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Ann Fan
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excellent story
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Mingling, murderings and mavericks
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Narration ruined it
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Ridiculous
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