Books make great stocking fillers and perfect presents when you buy someone the whole series as you could do with my recommendations of Christmas crime novels.
What Child Is This? by Bonnie MacBird (Collins Crime Club)
The fifth in
MacBird’s oeuvre of Sherlock Holmes’ adventures, this Christmas one has a
Dickensian flavour with its sweep of characters from the meanest existing in
poverty and workhouses to the higher echelons of society living in luxury.
Holmes is rather in the Scrooge frame of mind bah humbugging all the
festivities but he takes on two cases both involving sons: the attempted kidnap
of a beloved three year old child and the disappearance of a younger son of a
marquis.
Inspired by Conan Doyle’s The Blue
Carbuncle, and illustrated by Frank Cho, What Child Is This? brilliantly recreates the Victorian London of
the Holmes oeuvre and offers another intriguing mystery novel to delight fans
and those new to the genre. MacBird
has produced a page-turning tale full of cracking characters and devilish plots
with style and wit with a dénouement to warm the cockles of the reader’s heart.
Born in San Francisco, educated at Stanford, Bonnie MacBird
lives in London with her husband, computer scientist Alan Kay. A fan of Sir
Arthur Conan Doyle since age ten, she’s active in the Sherlockian community in
both the UK and the US, and lectures regularly on Sherlock Holmes, writing, and
creativity. A veteran of Hollywood, MacBird has been a screenwriter (original
script for TRON), an Emmy winning producer, a playwright, studio exec
(Universal) and actor.
Murder Most Royal by S. J. Bennett (Zaffre)
What’s not to
like about our late Queen Elizabeth solving murder mysteries while others flap
around trying not to upset her sensibilities? The third in the series in which
the Queen’s trusted assistant, Rozie, aids the “detective” by going to the
places and asking the questions the monarch cannot, is a delightful read.
A body part
washed up on the beach near the Sandringham Estate where the Queen and most of
her immediate family are spending the Christmas holidays, threatens the peace
and tranquility of the festive season especially when Her Majesty recognises a
ring on the dismembered hand. The victim is a distant cousin but the murderer
could be much closer to home.
Witty and
brilliantly observed by Ms Bennett, Murder Most Royal is full of intriguing
possibilities, fabulous set pieces relating to the royal family and is a great
who-done-it. The author has been a royal watcher for years, but is keen to
stress that these books are works of fiction: the Queen, to the best of her
knowledge, did not secretly solve crimes.
SJ Bennett was born in Yorkshire, England, and travelled the world as an
army child and a student of languages. After various jobs as a lo bbyist,
strategy consultant and start-up project manager she wrote several
award-winning books for teenagers before turning to adult crime novels with the
Her Majesty the Queen Investigates series, set in 2016. She lives in London.