"Fun personification mystery"
In Virginia, the students led by the "Three Musketeers"
protest that their all girls' prep school Custis Hall
fails to properly credit slaves for creating some of the
crafts on display. Though worthy, nothing really comes of
their protest at least that is what everyone involved
thought at the time. Everybody associated with Custis Hall seems to like good
natured Al Perez. That is everyone except the person who
murdered the director of alumnae affairs and fund raising
for the school. His corpse hangs next to a "dummy" dead
body at the students' Halloween dance. Though stunned by
the homicide, Headmistress Charlotte Norton remains calm
and keeps everyone else relatively composed. At about the same time, seventy-two years old "Sister"
Jane Arnold, the Master of the Virginia Jefferson Hunt
Club, learns of the death. She begins making inquires
assisted by her beloved animals but no motive seems to
surface. Still Jane assisted by the Three Musketeers and
her assortment of foxhounds, horses, foxes, birds, and
other "house pets" keeps digging not realizing that
someone is watching how close the menagerie gets to the
truth Though Sneaky Pie is not a co-author, the animals have
distinct personalities, names and traits and are able to
communicate with one another; something the dumb humans
except Jane fail to comprehend. The hunt and its related
ball are vividly described so that the audience gets a
taste of an upper crust event. The who-done-it is
cleverly developed but takes a back seat to the antics of
the animals (as is the case in most of Ms. Brown's
novels). Fans of the author will enjoy watching the
humans OUTFOXED by the animals at THE HUNT BALL. Harriet Klausner
Reviewed by Harriet Klausner
Posted August 28, 2005
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