Hosted by The Story Siren
I got plents of nice and light reading this week…..
I swapped
- Love over Scotland by Alexander McCall Smith. I am not going to read it right away as it is the third book in the 44 Scotland Street series, but I found it on my swap site, so I went for it.
I bought
- Death of a Hussy
- Death of a Snob
- Death of a Prankster
- Agatha Raisin and the vicious vet
- Agatha Raisin and the potted gardener, all by M. C. Beaton As you can see I am on a cozy roll.
What was in YOUR mailbox recently? Check out other In my mailbox participants here.
Blurb:
Agatha has moved to a picture-book English village and wants to get in the swing. So she buys herself a quiche for the village quiche-making contest and is more than alarmed when it kills a judge. Hot on the trail of the poisoner, Agatha is fearless, all the while unaware, that she’s become the next victim …
In a nutshell:
I read it in: English
I liked it: Very much
For people who like: Cosy mysteries, the Cotswolds, the English countryside, Miss Marple atmosphere with a tougher touch
My thoughts:
This is the first book in the Agatha Raisin series. After reading some of M. C. Beaton Hamish Macbeth books I decided to give Agatha Raisin a try and I was not disappointed.
Agatha Raisin is not a very likeable heroine, at least not at the beginning. She is a tough business woman who usually gets her way by bullying and/or flattering others and that’s about all she can do. Being nice doesn’t come naturally to her. When she – very uncharacteristically – gives all the credit for a local charity event that she organized to a friend, she immediately regrets it when he benefits from her action.
Obviously she also does not learn any lessons from previous events. She buys a quiche to enter it into a competition, someone dies from eating it which gets her into an awkward position. However, a little later she has no scruples to take a cake from a communal freezer to offer it to someone as her own, even though she has no idea whose cake it is and what might be in it. She just does what gets into her mind, not considering any consequences.
This also brings me to another question. Don’t they have to keep retained samples from food at such occasions? That should be standard procedure on occasions like the competition or even the storage freezer! That way the mystery would have been solved a little earlier.
All characters in the village were interesting and entertaining, and the Cotswolds are a great setting for the whole idea of a hardened ex-PR agent trying to ingratiate herself with the locals. The whole story was a pleasure to read; humour, atmosphere and a cosy mystery all combined to a very nice package.
Oh, the cover! Isn’t that a lovely cover?I don’t read chick lit but always like those illustrated covers and fancy fonts. So I am more than pleased with the covers of these Robinson editions.
Location: The fictional village of Carsely, Cotswolds, England, UK
Product info and buy link :
| Title | Agatha Raisin and the Quiche of Death |
| Author | M. C. Beaton |
| Publisher | Robinson Publishing |
| ISBN | 9781849011341 |
| I got this book from | I swapped it |
| Buy link | Buy Agatha Raisin and the Quiche of Death |
| More info | The Agatha Raisin series |
If you click on the buy link above you will be taken to The Book Depository.co.uk. If you buy the book through this link I will earn a small commission. You can find my general affiliate links to The Book Depository, Amazon.co.uk and Amazon.com here.
Have you read this book? What did you think of it? I would love to hear other opinions.
Birgit from The Book Garden reminded us of the fun Blogthings quizzes once more. I took some of them, the results are quite interesting.
| You Read to Be Entertained |
![]() You love to dance. You express yourself through movement, and you’re rarely sitting still. You’re optimistic about life. You feel excited about what’s to come… love, work, and new experiences. |
| Your Name is Miss Selina Collins |
![]() |
| You are a Dreamer |
![]() You are a sensitive person. You find it easy to be emotionally effected by books. You are a person with a few deep interests. If you’re drawn to something, you learn everything about it. You are a person who loves to acquire possessions. You can’t resist a sale, and you own a lot of things. |
What are you bookish results at Blogthings?
Murder is a Tasty Dish. The most hated man in the most dour town in Scotland is sleeping with the fishes, or-more accurately-dumped into a tank filled with crustaceans. All that remain of the murdered victim are his bones. But after the lobsters are shipped off to Britain’s best restaurants, the whole affair quickly lands on the plate of Constable Hamish Macbeth.
Exiled with his dog, Towser, to the dreary outpost of Cnothan, Macbeth sorely misses his beloved Lochdubh, his formerly beloved Priscilla Halburton-Smythe, and his days of doing nothing but staring at the sheep grazing in a nearby croft.
Now the lawman has to contend with a detective chief inspector who wants the modus operandi hushed up, a dark-haired lass who has an ulterior motive to seduce him, and a killer who has made mincemeat of his victim-and without doubt will strike again …
In a nutshell:
I read it in: English
I liked it: Yes
For people who like: the Highlands, cosy mysteries
My thoughts:
I can’t say I was too thrilled with the murder method. Not that I ever am, mind you, but the corpse in the fishtank being completely eaten is rather unsavory. The whole idea has been done more tastefully (but maybe tasteful was not M. C. Beaton’s intention anyway) by David Wishart in Food for the Fishes.
All that aside, this time the setting was different again. Where in book one there were tourists to be questioned, in book two the local gentry, here they are hostile villagers. There is quite a surprising variety of characters in those books.
One word to Blair. Why this oaf is still leading the investigations is a mystery to me. Why do the “rival” police officers always have to be so mind-numbingly dumb and antagonistic. Instead of securing Hamish’s cooperation (after all, he has solved the last two crimes single handedly and made Blair look rather stupid) he gives him mundane tasks and does everything he can do be an ass. By rights he should have been sent packing after book two.
Priscilla is becoming more and more of a nuisance mystery. She turns up at the end of the book and acts kind of jealous because of another woman’s affection to Hamish. Of course, her own various fiancés and guys she drags up to Scotland are perfectly ok. Strange double standard. Can’t say I like her.
Location: The fictional village of Cnothan, Highlands, Scotland, UK
Images from wikipedia and sxc.hu user arinas74
Movie tip
Product info and buy link :
| Title | Death of an outsider |
| Author | M. C. Beaton |
| Publisher | Robinson Publishing |
| ISBN | 9781845296681 |
| I got this book from | I bought it |
| Buy link | Buy Death of an outsider |
| More info | The Hamish Macbeth series |
If you click on the buy link above you will be taken to The Book Depository.co.uk. If you buy the book through this link I will earn a small commission. You can find my general affiliate links to The Book Depository, Amazon.co.uk and Amazon.com here.
Have you read this book? What did you think of it? I would love to hear other opinions.

In January:
- I read and reviewed Comeback Love by Peter Golden
- I read and reviewed The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe by C. S. Lewis for my Narnia reading project
- I read and reviewed Death of a Gossip by M.C. Beaton
- I read and reviewed The right attitude to rain and The careful use of compliments by Alexander McCall Smith
- I DNF’ed The madness of Lord Ian Mackenzie by Jennifer Ashley
- I read and reviewed Death of a Cad by M. C. Beaton
- I read Death of an Outsider by M. C. Beaton
- I read Agatha Raisin and the Quiche of Death by M. C. Beaton
- I read Death of a perfect wife by M. C. Beaton
I started to read and put back on the shelf for later:
- Changeless by Gail Carriger. Not at all in the mood for vampires and werewolves. Book beginning can be found here.
- A supposedly fun thing I’ll never do again by David Foster Wallace. Book beginning can be found here.
- The Prague cemetery by Umberto Eco. Wow, the first sentences was almost a whole page. Too much to handle for me right now. Will tackle this one another time.
- I participated in the Dreaming of Books Giveaway Hop
- I received a box full of goodies from Carin
For this month I am planning to:
- participate in the Literary Giveaway Blog Hop
- and read quite a bit as I will be in hospital for a while. Plenty of time for books – I hope! Alexander McCall Smith and M. C. Beaton will be the perfect bookish hospital fare.
What was YOUR reading month like?

I almost like planners of any kind more than bags – almost! As much as I try to stick to one Filofax and simply change the calendar part each year, I can’t. I NEED a new calendar for variety. Some time ago I found this site where you can design your own calendar either with templates they provide or with your own design for front and back. The inside you can fill with modules that you need, choose your favourite color etc. It’s great. This is my very personal self made pocket planner:
Both cover images I had already made previously, the front is part of a much larger poster that is hanging in our hall (the quote is by Seneca), the back is a smaller one I made for a scrapbooking challenge a long time ago (you had to use wings which were the rage back then. Instead of putting them on a cute kid I decided to put them on Mata Hari).
Want your own custom-made calendar? Go to Mein Taschenkalender!
![]()
It’s time for another “Quizzical Monday”!
Question:
What is the title of the last story by Stefan Zweig that he sent to his publisher only days before his suicide?
Leave a comment with your answer. Then, to see whether you got it right, click on "Show" below. As usual, there is nothing to be won, this is just for fun!
Hosted by The Story Siren
Due to all my computer problems the last couple of weeks were rather sad in terms of amounts of books. Nevertheless…..
I bought
After Death of a gossip I got the next three books in the Hamish Macbeth series
- Death of a cad by M. C. Beaton which I already blogged about here.
- Death of an outsider by M. C. Beaton
- Death of a perfect wife by M. C. Beaton
What was in YOUR mailbox recently? Check out other In my mailbox participants here.
If you like beads, wearing jewellery and books you need to have a look at Spellbound beads.
Making beads out of used books and turning them into bracelets sounds like the perfect combination to me. You can choose between art bracelets, travel bracelets, music, nature and so on….every time the beads are made from books corresponding with the theme you chose.
Love “Wuthering Height”? Get the bracelet! You like “Where the wild things are”? Dito! The prices are very reasonable, just to make a choice is hard! Check the bracelets out at Spellbound Beads!
When Priscilla Halburton-Smythe brings her London playwright fiance home to Lochdubh, the whole town is delighted — save perhaps for love-smitten bobby Hamish Macbeth. But the morning after a posh engagement party, one of the guests, Captain Bartlett, is murdered on a grouse hunt.
Unfortunately, the prime suspects are the party guests. And a second murder soon follows the first. Now Hamish Macbeth must cut through the alibis before the killer strikes again . . . all the while trying to woo the lovely Priscilla from her jealous boyfriend.
In a nutshell:
I read it in: English
I liked it: Yes
For people who like: Very cosy mysteries, Scotland, the British upper class
My thoughts:
This is the second instalment in the Hamish Macbeth series and this time we meet a few more locals. However, the locals are mostly gentry from the wider area, not so much the Lochdubhians (or whatever the inhabitants of Lochdubh call themselves).
I liked Hamish in the first book already, but now I like him even better. He really is Mr.Nice. Unfortunately, his sidekick, well, not really, Priscilla is not his sidekick but rather his crush, left a bad impression this time. Not only did she get engaged to a guy who she knew was a total prick, she also stayed engaged even though she realizes that they are not suited at all to put it mildly. And why? Because she doesn’t want to stand up to her parents! I hate women like that. Whining about their own weakness, but nevertheless not doing anything about it.
The mystery was a good one. It might be me but again I had no clue who the murderer was but was pleased with his/her identity. Hamish is a clever one indeed.
For cozy mystery lovers this series is a must read.
Location: The fictional village of Lochdubh, Highlands, Scotland, UK
Map from wikipedia, landscape by macleod from sxc.hu
Movie tip
Product info and buy link :
| Title | Death of a cad |
| Author | M. C. Beaton |
| Publisher | Robinson |
| ISBN | 9781845296667 |
| I got this book from | I bought it |
| Buy link | Buy Death of a cad |
| More info | The Hamish Macbeth series |
If you click on the buy link above you will be taken to The Book Depository.co.uk. If you buy the book through this link I will earn a small commission. You can find my general affiliate links to The Book Depository, Amazon.co.uk and Amazon.com here.
Have you read this book? What did you think of it? I would love to hear other opinions.












