M.C. Beaton (1936–2019)
Author of Agatha Raisin and the Quiche of Death
About the Author
M. C. Beaton's real name is Marion Chesney. She was born in Glasgow, Scotland, in 1936. She has written over a hundred books under her own name and other pseudonyms: Ann Fairfax, Helen Crampton, Jennie Tremaine, Charlotte Ward, and Sarah Chester. She started her writing career while working as a show more fiction buyer for a bookstore in Glasgow. Working at one time or another as a theater critic, newspaper reporter, and editor, she used her British background to write a series of regency romances set in England and Scotland. Some of her regency romances include The Folly, Colonel Sandhurst to the Rescue, and Regency Gold. In 1986, she was awarded the Romantic Times Award for Outstanding Regency Series Writer. She has also written two mystery series under the pseudonym M. C. Beaton: The Hamish Macbeth Series, which became the inspiration for a television show in England, and The Agatha Raisin Series, about a retired advertising executive. Her title His and Hers made The New York Times Best Seller List for 2012. Marion Chesney passed away on December 31, 2019 at the age of 83. (Bowker Author Biography) show less
Disambiguation Notice:
Marion Chesney also writes under the pseudonyms of Ann Fairfax, Jennie Tremaine, Helen Crampton, Charlotte Ward, M. C. Beaton, and Sarah Chester. More of her books are being reedited as Marion Chesney or M. C. Beaton.
Image credit: Marion Chesney Gibbons was mostly known by the pen name MC Beaton
Series
Works by M.C. Beaton
Agatha Raisin: The Wizard of Evesham / The Murderous Marriage (BBC Dramatization) (2009) 21 copies, 2 reviews
Agatha Raisin: The Curious Curate / The Buried Treasure (BBC Dramatization) (2009) 20 copies, 1 review
Agatha Raisin: The Quiche of Death & the Vicious Vet (BBC Dramatization) (2007) 18 copies, 3 reviews
Agatha Raisin: The Potted Gardener / The Walkers of Dembley (BBC Dramatization) (2007) 15 copies, 2 reviews
Death of a Gossip / Death of a Cad / Death of an Outsider / Death of a Perfect Wife (2012) 15 copies
Agatha Raisin and the Quiche of Death / and the Vicious Vet / and the Potted Gardener (2004) 12 copies, 1 review
The Daring Debutantes Series: Henrietta, Molly, Penelope, Lucy, Annabelle, Kitty, Sally (2020) 10 copies
Introducing Hamish Macbeth: Mysteries #1-3: Death of a Gossip, Death of a Cad, and Death of an Outsider Omnibus (2016) 6 copies
M. C. Beaton 3 copies
Agatha's First Case 2 copies
The Love from Hell 2 copies
De dood van een roddeltante 1 copy
Beaton M.C. (Marion Chesney) 1 copy
The Murderous Marriage 1 copy
Morte di una snob 1 copy
Hamish Macbeth 1-29 1 copy
Agatha Raisin 1-25 1 copy
Nine Saturdays 1 copy
Associated Works
Books to Die For: The World's Greatest Mystery Writers on the World's Greatest Mystery Novels (2012) 276 copies, 10 reviews
Agatha Raisin and the Quiche of Death: A Mystery/Comedy in Two Acts (2004) — Original author — 3 copies
Agatha Raisin [TV Series] 3 copies
Hamish MacBeth: The Big Freeze, Wee Jock's Lament and a Bit of an Epic — Original Books — 1 copy
Hamish Macbeth - Series 1 & 2 [Videorecording] — Original Books — 1 copy
Tagged
Common Knowledge
- Canonical name
- Beaton, M.C.
- Legal name
- Chesney Gibbons, Marion
- Other names
- Fairfax, Ann (pseudonym)
Tremaine, Jennie (pseudonym)
Crampton, Helen (pseudonym)
Chesney, Marion (maiden name and pseudonym)
Ward, Charlotte (pseudonym)
Beaton, M. C. (pseudonym) (show all 8)
Chester, Sarah (pseudonym)
Beaton, M.C. - Birthdate
- 1936-06-10
- Date of death
- 2019-12-30
- Gender
- female
- Occupations
- buyer (for bookshop)
theater critic
reporter (newspaper)
editor
novelist - Relationships
- Gibbons, Harry Scott (husband)
- Short biography
- Marion Chesney was a very prolific author, born in 1936 in Glasgow, Scotland. She started her first job as a bookseller in charge of the fiction department in John Smith & Sons Ltd. While bookselling, by chance, she got an offer from the Scottish Daily Mail to review variety shows and quickly rose to be their theatre critic. She left Smith’s to join Scottish Field magazine as a secretary in the advertising department, without any knowledge of shorthand or typing. She quickly got the job of fashion editor instead. She later moved to the Scottish Daily Express, where she reported mostly on crime. This was followed by a move to Fleet Street to the Daily Express where she became chief woman reporter. She married Harry Scott Gibbons, the paper's Middle East Correspondent and had a son, Charles. The family later moved to the United States where Harry had been offered the job of editor of the Oyster Bay Guardian. When that didn’t work out, they went to Virginia, where Marion worked as a waitress in a greasy spoon on the Jefferson Davies in Alexandria while Harry washed the dishes. Both then got jobs on Rupert Murdoch’s new tabloid, The Star, and moved to New York. Anxious to spend more time at home with her small son, Marion began to write historical romances in 1977. Marion wrote over 100 of these historical romances under her maiden name Marion Chesney, and under the pseudonyms: Ann Fairfax, Jennie Tremaine, Helen Crampton, Charlotte Ward, and Sarah Chester. Finally becoming fed up with all eras from 1714 to 1910, she began to write contemporary detectives stories in 1985 under the pseudonym of M. C. Beaton. A trip to Sutherland on holiday and a course at a fishing school inspired the first Constable Hamish Macbeth story. The family later returned to Britain and bought a croft in Sutherland where Harry reared a flock of black sheep and Charles went to school in London. When Charles finished school, they moved to the Cotswolds where Agatha Raisin was created.
- Nationality
- UK
- Birthplace
- Glasgow, Lanarkshire, Scotland, UK
- Places of residence
- Cotswolds, England, UK
Paris, Île-de-France, France - Place of death
- Gloucester, Gloucestershire, England, UK
- Map Location
- Scotland, UK
- Disambiguation notice
- Marion Chesney also writes under the pseudonyms of Ann Fairfax, Jennie Tremaine, Helen Crampton, Charlotte Ward, M. C. Beaton, and Sarah Chester. More of her books are being reedited as Marion Chesney or M. C. Beaton.
Members
Reviews
The charm of the Scottish Highlands and a truly likable detective offer airy bliss for mystery lovers in M.C. Beaton's Hamish Macbeth series.
For anyone not familiar with this fine series, Hamish Macbeth is a constable in the Highland village of Lochdubh, and much of the enjoyment for the reader is derived from the quirky interactions between Hamish and Lochdubh's residents. The lanky and red-haired Hamish is a bachelor the entire village would like to see romantically attached. There seems show more to be no end of choices, but Hamish can never quite settle his heart on just one. While being a quite gifted investigator, he makes his crime solving abilities appear as fortuitous happenings in order to remain under the radar, so that he may remain in his beloved Lochdubh with his animals, including a wild Highland cat he has attempted to domesticate with shaky results.
In Death of a Dreamer, village tongues are wagging when a local artist named Effie, a dreamer who lives in her own world, claims to be marrying a visiting artist named Jock. He denies offering to marry her, however. He has an ex-wife with a grudge, and a female agent named Betty to whom Hamish is more than a bit attracted, which of course creates more village gossip.
Hamish smells trouble on the Highland winds and it isn't long before Effie's somewhat sad existence comes to an end. When old flame Priscilla returns and Hamish has Glasgow reporter Elspeth to deal with as well, will he be too distracted to get at the truth? Having a C.S.I. team which gets inebriated at the local pub, leading to Jedi fights with blue-lights substituting for light sabers, doesn't help our favorite constable much. Adding another spanner to the works, Hamish is teamed with a rather ambitious colleague named Robin, which is certain to lead to trouble in a village like Lochdubh.
Everyone writes off Effie's death as a suicide at first, but Hamish knows better. The deeper he looks into Effie's past, and her interactions with people, the longer his list of suspects becomes. A second death occurs before Hamish's wild cat saves the day in this fun and enjoyable mystery.
Filled with charm, politically incorrect humor and a quirky atmosphere which will leave you pining for a visit to Scotland, this is a fine series somewhere between a cozy and a traditional detective story. If you like your mysteries to leave a smile on your face, then Hamish and Lochdubh is a place you'll want to visit as often as possible. Highly recommended! show less
For anyone not familiar with this fine series, Hamish Macbeth is a constable in the Highland village of Lochdubh, and much of the enjoyment for the reader is derived from the quirky interactions between Hamish and Lochdubh's residents. The lanky and red-haired Hamish is a bachelor the entire village would like to see romantically attached. There seems show more to be no end of choices, but Hamish can never quite settle his heart on just one. While being a quite gifted investigator, he makes his crime solving abilities appear as fortuitous happenings in order to remain under the radar, so that he may remain in his beloved Lochdubh with his animals, including a wild Highland cat he has attempted to domesticate with shaky results.
In Death of a Dreamer, village tongues are wagging when a local artist named Effie, a dreamer who lives in her own world, claims to be marrying a visiting artist named Jock. He denies offering to marry her, however. He has an ex-wife with a grudge, and a female agent named Betty to whom Hamish is more than a bit attracted, which of course creates more village gossip.
Hamish smells trouble on the Highland winds and it isn't long before Effie's somewhat sad existence comes to an end. When old flame Priscilla returns and Hamish has Glasgow reporter Elspeth to deal with as well, will he be too distracted to get at the truth? Having a C.S.I. team which gets inebriated at the local pub, leading to Jedi fights with blue-lights substituting for light sabers, doesn't help our favorite constable much. Adding another spanner to the works, Hamish is teamed with a rather ambitious colleague named Robin, which is certain to lead to trouble in a village like Lochdubh.
Everyone writes off Effie's death as a suicide at first, but Hamish knows better. The deeper he looks into Effie's past, and her interactions with people, the longer his list of suspects becomes. A second death occurs before Hamish's wild cat saves the day in this fun and enjoyable mystery.
Filled with charm, politically incorrect humor and a quirky atmosphere which will leave you pining for a visit to Scotland, this is a fine series somewhere between a cozy and a traditional detective story. If you like your mysteries to leave a smile on your face, then Hamish and Lochdubh is a place you'll want to visit as often as possible. Highly recommended! show less
“What evil’s come to Lochdubh?” — Mrs. McClellan
“Whatever it is,” said Hamish grimly, “Fergus Macleod did something to bring it here.”
Wildly politically incorrect and laced with hilarious dark comedy, this delightful mystery series set in the fictional village of Lochdubh in Scotland is a hoot. It features Hamish Macbeth, a tall redheaded policeman whose knack for solving crimes makes it difficult for the unambitious copper to avert promotion so that he can remain in the show more quirky village. This series is a refreshing change from just about everything else out there. Sure, they’re all a bit similar, but that makes them no less enjoyable. Fans adore Hamish and the quirky residents of Lochdubh. Each visit moves at a breezy and enjoyable pace, has a murder or two, a few wistful moments, and plenty of laughs derived from biting social commentary so contrary to the uber-sensitive crowd run amok, that we’d all like to live in Lochdubh were it not for the high mortality rate!
In Death of a Dustman, bossy Freda Fleming arrives from Strathbane to use her new position as Officer of Environment to “green” up Lochdubh, and get her face in the papers. If you’ve ever read a Hamish Macbeth mystery you’re probably already imagining the adverse reaction of the residents of Lochdubh. It is made worse by drunk dustman (garbageman) Fergus Macleod, who lets his laughable, sparkly new uniform and higher salary go to his head. Soon, everyone in Lochdubh is ready to murder the wife-beating lout. When the Currie sisters report a bad smell coming from one of the huge recycling bins, Hamish discovers someone has acted on their impulse.
In Death of a Dustman, Hamish has a new helper named Clarry. Big and slovenly, Clarry loves to cook more than he loves policing, and is soon sweet on Martha, the beleaguered wife of Fergus. This of course makes him a top suspect in the eyes of Blair, the bane of Hamish’s existence. The situation quickly goes from bad to worse as Hamish discovers that Fergus may have been blackmailing his beloved neighbors. As if that weren’t enough to make the lanky Hamish irritable, Priscilla has a new beau, and it turns out that her father, the Colonel, may have been the last to see Fergus alive. Mix in a pretty new schoolteacher, a second murder, and a shady new hotel owner, and you have the makings for another delightful mystery filled with laughs, and a few poignant moments.
Just a fabulous series that will certainly offend those who are offended by everything nowadays anyway, but delight a great many more readers. Death of a Dustman is another great read in a popular series full of them. Though there are murders, this series is as much about Hamish and the quirky villagers of Lochdubh we’ve come to love over the years. Putting on your mystery solving cap is really unnecessary when reading a Hamish Macbeth novel — and might in fact impede your enjoyment of them. A Hamish Macbeth mystery is the next best thing to actually visiting the Highlands, and Death of a Dustman is a nice vacation from weightier reads. Highly recommended! show less
“Whatever it is,” said Hamish grimly, “Fergus Macleod did something to bring it here.”
Wildly politically incorrect and laced with hilarious dark comedy, this delightful mystery series set in the fictional village of Lochdubh in Scotland is a hoot. It features Hamish Macbeth, a tall redheaded policeman whose knack for solving crimes makes it difficult for the unambitious copper to avert promotion so that he can remain in the show more quirky village. This series is a refreshing change from just about everything else out there. Sure, they’re all a bit similar, but that makes them no less enjoyable. Fans adore Hamish and the quirky residents of Lochdubh. Each visit moves at a breezy and enjoyable pace, has a murder or two, a few wistful moments, and plenty of laughs derived from biting social commentary so contrary to the uber-sensitive crowd run amok, that we’d all like to live in Lochdubh were it not for the high mortality rate!
In Death of a Dustman, bossy Freda Fleming arrives from Strathbane to use her new position as Officer of Environment to “green” up Lochdubh, and get her face in the papers. If you’ve ever read a Hamish Macbeth mystery you’re probably already imagining the adverse reaction of the residents of Lochdubh. It is made worse by drunk dustman (garbageman) Fergus Macleod, who lets his laughable, sparkly new uniform and higher salary go to his head. Soon, everyone in Lochdubh is ready to murder the wife-beating lout. When the Currie sisters report a bad smell coming from one of the huge recycling bins, Hamish discovers someone has acted on their impulse.
In Death of a Dustman, Hamish has a new helper named Clarry. Big and slovenly, Clarry loves to cook more than he loves policing, and is soon sweet on Martha, the beleaguered wife of Fergus. This of course makes him a top suspect in the eyes of Blair, the bane of Hamish’s existence. The situation quickly goes from bad to worse as Hamish discovers that Fergus may have been blackmailing his beloved neighbors. As if that weren’t enough to make the lanky Hamish irritable, Priscilla has a new beau, and it turns out that her father, the Colonel, may have been the last to see Fergus alive. Mix in a pretty new schoolteacher, a second murder, and a shady new hotel owner, and you have the makings for another delightful mystery filled with laughs, and a few poignant moments.
Just a fabulous series that will certainly offend those who are offended by everything nowadays anyway, but delight a great many more readers. Death of a Dustman is another great read in a popular series full of them. Though there are murders, this series is as much about Hamish and the quirky villagers of Lochdubh we’ve come to love over the years. Putting on your mystery solving cap is really unnecessary when reading a Hamish Macbeth novel — and might in fact impede your enjoyment of them. A Hamish Macbeth mystery is the next best thing to actually visiting the Highlands, and Death of a Dustman is a nice vacation from weightier reads. Highly recommended! show less
{First in The Travelling Matchmaker series; historical fiction, 1800, George III, adventure, light-hearted, romance, clean romance}(1990)
I think that this was an LT recommendation; it's by the author of the Agatha Raisin books and was similarly lighthearted fun. This story takes place in 1800 during the reign of George III, about a decade before the Regency but the framing premise was unusual in that a housekeeper receives a bequest of £5,000 sterling (about 1/2 - 3/4 million pounds today) show more which lifts her from the servant class into the middle classes and enables her to live independently.
Hannah Pym, now a 45 year old spinster, has advanced up the ranks to fulfil her ambition to become a housekeeper but the atmosphere of the house she works in has turned sombre in recent years. Her one spark of daily excitement comes from watching the stagecoach go past the manor house and, now that she can afford it, her ambition is to travel through England.
Her first trip, the subject of this book, is on the 'Exeter Flying Machine' since that is the stagecoach which passes the house every day, for which she buys an inside ticket (ie one that allows her to sit inside the coach). But it is the depth of winter and even getting to Kensington, her former abode (can you believe that where Harrod's is now was outside London then?), is an adventure - they are accosted by a highwayman and the ever-curious Miss Pym suspects that some of the passengers are not who they claim to be. There's a Miss Emily Freemantle, for instance, running away from an arranged marriage to a rake whom she's never met - and then he turns up as well, but not to claim his intended bride.
Inevitably they become snowed-in at an inn before they can complete their normally-three day journey (in fact a fair proportion of the passengers never make it to Exeter by the end of the book) - and then the adventures really start. Miss Pym takes charge, organising the disparate personalities to manage for themselves in the absence of the inn staff and along the way acts as matchmaker between some of the characters because she feels - rightly or wrongly - that they would be better suited together than to continue on the path that they've chosen for themselves.
This story was fairly short and sweet with a bit of derring-do - Miss Pym is no shrinking violet and she usually brings out the best in others, too. She isn't ashamed of her origins but she does understand that her travelling companions would react differently to her if they knew of them; she is essentially honest (though she does occasionally resort to subterfuge to get what she hopes is the best outcome) and does tell those who ask her directly. Long years of observation (and common sense) enable her to behave as appropriate to her new status but she often slips back into old assumptions (such as not knocking before entering a room, since servants were supposed to be invisible).
I enjoyed this book, which had some amusing touches.
On to the next adventure with Miss Pam!
(March 2025)
3.5-4 stars show less
I think that this was an LT recommendation; it's by the author of the Agatha Raisin books and was similarly lighthearted fun. This story takes place in 1800 during the reign of George III, about a decade before the Regency but the framing premise was unusual in that a housekeeper receives a bequest of £5,000 sterling (about 1/2 - 3/4 million pounds today) show more which lifts her from the servant class into the middle classes and enables her to live independently.
Hannah Pym, now a 45 year old spinster, has advanced up the ranks to fulfil her ambition to become a housekeeper but the atmosphere of the house she works in has turned sombre in recent years. Her one spark of daily excitement comes from watching the stagecoach go past the manor house and, now that she can afford it, her ambition is to travel through England.
Her first trip, the subject of this book, is on the 'Exeter Flying Machine' since that is the stagecoach which passes the house every day, for which she buys an inside ticket (ie one that allows her to sit inside the coach). But it is the depth of winter and even getting to Kensington, her former abode (can you believe that where Harrod's is now was outside London then?), is an adventure - they are accosted by a highwayman and the ever-curious Miss Pym suspects that some of the passengers are not who they claim to be. There's a Miss Emily Freemantle, for instance, running away from an arranged marriage to a rake whom she's never met - and then he turns up as well, but not to claim his intended bride.
Inevitably they become snowed-in at an inn before they can complete their normally-three day journey (in fact a fair proportion of the passengers never make it to Exeter by the end of the book) - and then the adventures really start. Miss Pym takes charge, organising the disparate personalities to manage for themselves in the absence of the inn staff and along the way acts as matchmaker between some of the characters because she feels - rightly or wrongly - that they would be better suited together than to continue on the path that they've chosen for themselves.
This story was fairly short and sweet with a bit of derring-do - Miss Pym is no shrinking violet and she usually brings out the best in others, too. She isn't ashamed of her origins but she does understand that her travelling companions would react differently to her if they knew of them; she is essentially honest (though she does occasionally resort to subterfuge to get what she hopes is the best outcome) and does tell those who ask her directly. Long years of observation (and common sense) enable her to behave as appropriate to her new status but she often slips back into old assumptions (such as not knocking before entering a room, since servants were supposed to be invisible).
I enjoyed this book, which had some amusing touches.
‘We are in need of your help,’ said Emily. ‘Mrs Bradley is s-stuck in the bath.’ She began to giggle helplessly, leaning against the kitchen door. Lord Harley began to laugh as well.Coach travel, in this story at least (I don't know enough historical detail to confirm it), seems to have blurred some class distinctions (between nobility and gentry using coaches rather than private travel means, for instance) and created others (whether you rode inside or outside the coach). Maybe I'll learn more in the other stories in this series.
The door opened a crack and Hannah’s cold eye surveyed the laughing pair. ‘Pull yourselves together,’ she admonished. ‘My lord, be as quick and deft as you can, for Mrs Bradley is sore embarrassed.’
They followed Hannah into the kitchen. Not only Mrs Bradley’s body was covered by a sheet but her face as well.
Give me your hands, Mrs Bradley,’ ordered Lord Harley. Two hands appeared from below the sheet. He gave a great heave. The bath tilted and more water flooded on the floor but Mrs Bradley remained stuck fast.
‘I am sorry about this,’ he said, bending over the coffin-shaped tin bath to examine her more closely. He took off his coat and rolled up his shirt-sleeves and slid his hands into the water under the sheet and then, as a squawk of sheer outrage rose from Mrs Bradley’s lips, under her bottom. With one almightly wrench he lifted her clear from the bath and set her down on her feet.
Panting and blushing, Mrs Bradley wrapped the sheet round her ample body.
‘Like Venus rising from the foam,’ said Lord Harley gently and kissed one plump cheek.
‘Oh, go on with you, me lord,’ giggled a newly coquettish Mrs Bradley.
On to the next adventure with Miss Pam!
(March 2025)
3.5-4 stars show less
When a matchmaking service for the rich sets up a week-long session with eight “customers” at Tommel Castle Hotel, it is assumed that the four matched pairs will enjoy the rarified air of the Highlands, but trouble soon infiltrates the would-be love nests in the form of Peta, the grossly obese glutton who co-owns the matchmaking service (although she does none of the work). Not only is Peta loud and vulgar, she eats like a pig - worse than a pig really, taking not only her own portion of show more a meal but everybody else’s too. Everyone breathes a sigh of relief when she disappears one morning, having left a typewritten note stating that she was taking an early bus away from Lochdubh, but it is not too long before a couple of children come across her dead body, her mouth stuffed with a huge apple. Of course, Chief Detective Inspector Blair has no qualms about who to arrest, but PC Hamish Macbeth is quite sure that he is wrong, and that someone else might be in danger as well….This is the eighth book in the Hamish Macbeth series and like the ones before it, it’s light and funny and full of quirky characters. We get more of the on-again, off-again potential romance between Hamish and Priscilla - their relationship seems to veer between very prickly and quite cozy - but it is Hamish’s ability to suss out the truth that always stands out in these books. A good comfort read, and I’m glad I have many more to go in order to catch up with the whole series; recommended! show less
Lists
Books Read in 2024 (39)
Favorite Series (2)
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Statistics
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- 278
- Also by
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- Popularity
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- Rating
- 3.5
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