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Jennifer Jordan (1)

Author of Murder Under The Mistletoe

For other authors named Jennifer Jordan, see the disambiguation page.

3+ Works 74 Members 2 Reviews

Series

Works by Jennifer Jordan

Murder Under The Mistletoe (1988) 62 copies, 1 review
Book Early for Murder (1992) 6 copies
A Good Weekend for Murder (1987) 6 copies, 1 review

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Common Knowledge

Gender
female
Occupations
mystery writer
Nationality
UK
Associated Place (for map)
UK

Members

Reviews

3 reviews
It seemed to have all the things I'd want to see in a light mystery like charming inns and antique stores but it fell short. The characters weren't really interesting or likable and the point of view kept shifting. A good book should make you look up and realize you've read far beyond the chapter you had meant to stop at. It was all I could do to make myself pick it up again to read more and I could barely make it through a page or two before I got bored with it. I got it at a library book show more sale for 50 cent and I feel I spent too much. It won't be lingering on my bookshelf, it's going straight to the give to charity pile, maybe it will be to someone else's taste. show less
A Good Weekend for Murder is the first installment in a series featuring Barry Vaughan, a history teacher and British crime fiction writer, and his wife, Dee. The story centers around another crime novelist, Charles Wild, who has managed to make enough enemies, all with reasons to kill him. He is murdered at his lavish country house, but with so many suspects, the police are going to have a very difficult time making sense of it all. Enter the Vaughans, who have also been invited to the show more party and who take up amateur sleuthing in an effort to get to the bottom of the murder.

Up until the murder, the story is quite good, largely because Charles Wild is such a great bad guy and the author spends a lot of time setting the scene for him to be a person most likely to die because of his nasty personality. But once the murder occurs and the police step in, it's like the author kind of ran out steam and couldn't figure out where the story was going. The Vaughans, as a detective duo who reconjure themselves as Nick and Nora Charles, aren't so great as characters, but the real problem is the plotting and the pacing. The end comes as a rush, and it seemed that the announcement of the killer was more of an afterthought than the purpose of the mystery. I'm willing to let this slide and go on to the next in the series because it's a series opener, but hard-core mystery readers may be a bit disappointed overall.

I'd recommend it with caution, because it's a bit unsatisfying. The unraveling of the murder plot is a bit ho-hum and I'd probably guess that it's more oriented to cozy readers rather than more serious mystery readers like myself.
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Statistics

Works
3
Also by
1
Members
74
Popularity
#238,153
Rating
½ 3.3
Reviews
2
ISBNs
50
Languages
4

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