The Dead Sang Off Key by J.L. Buck – Review

The Dead Sang Off Key (Viscount Ware Mystery Book 4)

Barbara’s rating: 4 out of 5 Stars
Series: A Viscount Ware Mystery #4
Publication Date: 7/9/24
Period: Regency
Number of Pages: 291

Excitement abounds in this latest addition to the Viscount Ware Mystery series. With a disappearing dead body, smugglers, French spies, blackmail, a disgruntled magistrate, and a love interest in danger, Lucien has his hands full. Luckily, his fellow agent, Andrew Sherbourne, supports him every step of the way. Of course, Lady Anne is front and center – in the mystery and in Lucien’s heart.

When summoned to Whitehall, Lucien is told that the French spies they have been chasing have kidnapped the seventeen-year-old daughter of a Spanish diplomat so they can blackmail him into spying for them. Lucien and Sherbourne hardly have a clue where to begin since the kidnapping happened over a month ago.

Lady Anne Ashburn and her father are near the seashore mourning the death of her mother who passed away several months previous. When her father is suddenly called back to London to attend to parliamentary business, Anne stays behind. What can a young, unmarried lady do in a small coastal town when she is in mourning and cannot make social calls or attend any functions? Well, she can walk the beach and maybe explore the Singing Cave – and she does. She also finds the body of a young dark-haired girl in that cave. Except the body has disappeared by the time she returns with a constable who then treats her very dismissively. Where did the body go? She certainly didn’t get up and walk away.

Can the body Lady Anne found be the missing Spanish girl Lucien is looking for? They’ll have to find the body and ensure an identification, but Lucien is sure they are the same. Then, they’ll have to turn the area upside down to find out what happened to her.

With an investigation that must be handled softly to assure the French are unaware of the finding of the body, it is difficult to proceed. Then, there is a town that doesn’t want to talk for fear of prosecution for smuggling, a Magistrate who doesn’t want to cooperate, and a grieving father to console. How can they ever find the man who is behind such a heinous act? Oh, they can find the street-tuffs who abducted the girl, but they aren’t the ring leaders and that is who they have to find.

Luckily, Lucien, Sherbourne, and Lady Anne are just the ones to solve it all and take the French spies down. Arrogance can bring a villain down and it certainly did in this case. To me, the vilest villain was the one who got no real punishment, but to tell would be a spoiler. SIGH! So, if you are looking for an exciting, fast-paced, nail-biting, adventure, this is the book for you. Happy Reading!

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No Stone Unturned by Pam Lecky – Review

No Stone Unturned (The Lucy Lawrence Mysteries #1)Barbara’s rating: 4.4 out of 5 Stars
Series: The Lucy Lawrence Mysteries #1
Publication Date: 7/25/24
Period: Georgian
Number of Pages: 332

Oh! What a happy little accident! I discovered this lovely book and author while browsing around looking for something to read, and I think I am hooked. The writing was excellent, the plot was layered, nuanced, and multifaceted, and the characters were fully formed and three-dimensional. My favorite character was Phineas Stone, the handsome, intelligent investigator who was investigating a theft of rare, valuable sapphires. I also liked Lucy Lawrence, but, for me, she didn’t quite live up to the expectations set forth in the book. She leapt to the wrong conclusions much too often and often trusted or mistrusted the wrong people regularly. I’ll be looking forward to seeing whether those flaws continue or if she will become the strong, intelligent, wise, and intuitive person she is touted to be. I also discovered this book had been previously published in June of 2019 by Avon (I think) and is now being published by Storm Publishing. Evidently, it was a four-book deal – but I don’t think four books will be nearly enough for me – there must be more.

Lucy Somerville eloped with Charlie Lawrence ten years earlier because her family was dead-set against the match. They loved each other, but one cannot live on love alone and when her father and family disowned her and refused to provide her dowry, things got tight and tough because Charlie didn’t have money either. Lucy was just happy to escape a vile family. However, lately, Charlie had been away more, moody, withdrawn, and his temper more volatile. Lucy wants them to grow closer again, but doesn’t know how to make it happen – and then – there will be no chance for it to happen because Charlie lies in the morgue and a very bad man has begun to accost Lucy. What in the world had Charlie gotten himself into? There is also another man who makes an appearance at Charlie’s death. He SAYS Charlie was his only lead in the case he is investigating – but can she trust him? Time will tell.

Phineas (Phin) Stone is from a successful gentry family and doesn’t want to go into one of the traditional roles for ‘lesser’ sons. No military or clergy for him – so he read law – but found he liked investigating and was really good at it. With insurance companies paying large rewards for discovering the whereabouts of items they’ve insured and paid claims on – or for investigating and keeping them from paying out for fraudulent claims – Phin is quite a wealthy fellow.

For me, Lucy was all over the place in the book and I had to question her judgment. I know she came from a family that made her distrustful – I can see that – but – after all of the gosh-awful things they did to her, she trusts them again and begins to distrust Phin. Anyway, Phin is searching for 3 stolen sapphires and Charlie was his lead to finding them. As Phin and Lucy work together to find out what happened and where the sapphires might be, they draw closer – until Lucy, again, hares off on her own. Can they solve the case and find the sapphires? What will happen with that nasty villain who keeps cropping up? Is Phin trustworthy? Is her family trustworthy? You’ll just have to read this nail-biting book to find out.

I enjoyed the book and will tell you I am looking forward to the next one. I will also mention one thing that bothered me about Lucy and it probably didn’t bother anyone else, so take it for what it is worth. This may be a tad of a spoiler, so, if you don’t want to see it, stop reading here. (view spoiler)

This was a very enjoyable read and I would read it again. BTW – I loved the play on Phileas’s name in the title.