3.38 AVERAGE


A lovely little cozy set during a family gathering during the Christmas holidays; plays very, very fair with the reader. Stands out, in my mind, for the exceptional clarity and honestly in its portrayal of the Melburys and their hangers-on - the classism and narcissism of the family is gently, but firmly critiqued. An outstanding entry in the series!

I received an ecopy from the publishers and NetGalley in exchange for an honest review.

This was a Christmas gift and I absolutely loved it. A good old Agatha Christie style murder at Christmas, in a country house. The perfect thing to get me through the post-Christmas back to work blues.

Well, ....
It seems I am in a Hit/miss situation right now when it comes to crime novels. I liked the first chapters nur bang after the middle part I got so bored with those lengthy ideas and explanations that I jumped to the end.

Dreadfully dry and drawn out. All characters could easily have been guilty and I wouldn't have cared. Crazy slow pacing. Only truly engaging for a few chapters.
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bev_reads_mysteries's review

4.0

Forget about Grandma getting run over-by a reindeer. Did Santa really murder Sir Osmond Melbury, the difficult family patriarch, during the Christmas festivities at Flaxmere, home of the Melburys?

Sir Osmond, not usually known for his good will, had decided that this year Santa Klaus (none of that Father Christmas nonsense for him) would deliver the toys to the grandchildren during the annual family gathering. So, he orders up a suit and invites Oliver Whitcombe, his preferred suitor for his youngest daughter, Jennifer, to join the country house gathering and dress up for the children. The suit doesn't arrive on time and another is ordered in time for the gift-giving.

But after the presents have been distributed--to grandchildren, children, and staff alike--Santa returns to the study for final orders from Sir Osmond only to find Flaxmere's lord and master shot through the head. When Colonel Halstock, the Chief Constable, and Detective-Inspector Rousdon investigate it appears that everyone but Santa (Whitcombe) had plenty of reasons to want the old man out of the way, but nobody but Santa had an opportunity to do the deed. But then, everyone is hiding a secret or two and nearly everyone has told a few lies. Once the evidence has been sifted, the secrets have been uncovered, and the lies have been traded in for truth, it looks like Santa really did kill Sir Osmond. But it wasn't Whitcombe. Who had time to don a second Santa suit and shoot him while the Christmas crackers were popping? And whose motive was great enough to drive them to murder?

In The Santa Klaus Murder Mavis Doriel Hay provides readers with a fine example of that Golden Age standard--the country house murder. We've got the overbearing, difficult patriarch who holds the purse-strings and likes to make his children dance to his tune and punish them when they don't. We've got his children--grown-up with lives of their own and a desire for dear old dad to pass the family wealth along to help make those lives more comfortable. And a fear that dear old dad may be too fond of his faithful, devoted secretary and be silly enough to marry her or at the very least leave her a sizable chunk of the cash if he decides to change his will. Jennifer, the youngest, just wants to be able to leave home and marry the man she loves (NOT Oliver Whitcombe, by the way). The servants are even hoping for a bit of an inheritance to help make their lives more comfortable as well. In other words, the place is simply bursting with motives.

As mentioned, we also have all kinds of misdirection--through outright lies or a reluctance to tell everything one knows. There are red herrings and planted clues and mysterious messages and the phone call that never came. There's the disappearance of a former chauffeur. It all makes for great fun and a rollicking good tale of murder and mayhem just in time for the holiday season.

First posted on my blog My Reader's Block. Please request permission before reposting. Thanks.

Such a fun little Christmas read. It has hints of Agatha Christie and you can feel that they're from the shame period.

I guessed how the murder was done but not the murderer. If you like crime then I suggest looking into the British Crime Library books.

***Copy from NetGalley in return for an honest review***

I've read Mavis Doriel Hay's other crime novels - and they are brilliant, but forgotten, Golden Age crime stories. This is no exception. A Christmas set house-party murder - with chapters written by various different character - it ticks all the boxes for what I look for in a murder mystery. It's well worth starting your Christmas reading with this.

3 1/2 stars

A bit long winded! And to be honest I found it quite dull in parts. It was a long slog to get to the end!

The Santa Klaus Murder is a lovely and engaging read for the Christmas season. It has Santa, it has murder and it has intrigue. What more could you want on Christmas day? I would've rated this book higher, but the story line while engaging, wasn't the most interesting. Most of the characters were rather unlikable including the dead guy, so I truly didn't care that much in who killed him. But it was entertaining enough. 3/5