Move over, Inspector! Lady Poppy Proudfoot is here to solve her very first case.
Scotland, 1924: When Lady Poppy Proudfoot travels to the Highlands for a midsummer party, the last thing she and her fellow guests expect is for a body to wash up beside the loch.
Despite protests that it could have been an accident, Poppy is convinced it’s murder and decides to dust off her law degree and hunt for clues. But when the police arrive, the grumpy Inspector MacKenzie dismisses her evidence, insisting a crime scene is no place for a Lady. The nerve!
With the help of her trusted Labrador, Major, Poppy begins to unpick the case. But she soon has two mysteries to solve, as her host Lady Constance Balfour claims a diamond and emerald bracelet has been stolen. Could the two cases be linked? Was it Freddy the footman, a favourite of her ladyship? Or American actress Miss Cornett, with a keen eye for jewels? Or with such a dazzling guestlist, was someone from the local village tempted into the grounds by the party?
When a woman bearing an uncanny resemblance to Poppy is attacked, she realizes that someone wants her off the case. Someone connected to Balfour House is a murderer and a thief, but who? And can Poppy solve the mystery before she, too, washes up beside the loch?
A warm, unputdownable page-turning historical whodunnit, perfect for fans of Helena Dixon, Verity Bright, T.E. Kinsey and Catherine Coles.
Author Bio:
Lydia Travers was born in London. She moved progressively north until settling with her husband in a village on the edge of the Scottish Highlands. She has raised children, bred dogs and kept chickens; and for as long as she can remember has written for pleasure. A former legal academic and practitioner with a PhD in criminology, she now runs self-catering holiday accommodation, sings in a local choir and is walked daily by the family dog.
Lydia also writes as Linda Tyler and her first novel under that name, Revenge of the Spanish Princess, won a 2018 Romance Writers of America competition for the beginning of an historical romance. Her second novel The Laird's Secret was Commended in the 2021 Scottish Association of Writers' Pitlochry Quaich competition for the beginning of a romantic novel. Mischief in Midlothian won the 2022 Scottish Association of Writers' Constable Silver Stag trophy. She has had a number of short stories published in magazines, journals and anthologies in the UK, the USA and Australia.
I love that cover!
ReplyDeleteIt is a pretty cover!
DeleteProbably not my thing but glad you could enjoy it.
ReplyDeleteAnne - Books of My Heart
Thanks!
DeleteI'm glad it was entertaining.
ReplyDeleteMe too!
DeleteI struggle with audiobooks with accents. I need to listen too closely to ingest it properly.
ReplyDeleteI know what you mean. I usually have to listen at a little slower speed.
DeleteOverly dramatic, now I kind of want to listen just cos of that
ReplyDeleteHaha! Let me know what you think!
DeleteIt was this time in 2019 that I was vacationing in the UK. I was just looking at pictures the other day, but reading a book set on the other side of the pond would be a fun way to relive a bit of that trip. Great review!
ReplyDeleteHow fun, Ethan! I want to go back to the UK and add Scotland into the trip!
DeleteDoesn't sound like a must read or listen. Thanks for sharing.
ReplyDeleteI am enjoying a few historical cozy mystery series, but this sounds like it could sneak onto my TBR shelf.
ReplyDeleteHope you like it if you pick it up, Carla!
DeleteSuper cute cover. I adore a fun light cozy. Thanks!
ReplyDeleteIt is a fun cover! Hope you like it if you pick it up, Jen!
DeleteFun cover, and I do love a good Scotland setting! Thanks for sharing your thoughts!
ReplyDeletehttps://lisalovesliterature.bookblog.io/2025/05/28/l-l-l-little-reviews-76-may-2025/