"A fine entry in a strong series."
At the Berebury Golf Course, female "Rabbit" Helen Ewell
plays with her friend Ursula Millwood when she sinks a
shot into a bunker on the sixth hole. As she struggles to
dig out of the sand trap she uncovers the head of a dead
person. Hysterical she tells Ursula she thinks she may
have stroked an eyeball out of the trap. Calleshire County Police Superintendent Leeyes is at the
links on his day off. He calls his chief of Criminal
Investigation Division Detective Inspector Sloan to get
over to the country club "quicker than soonest". Sloan
begins to investigate the homicide with the help of
dimwitted Crosby and astute "pretty Polly" Perkins. The pastoral setting of the country club in which the two
ladies slowly (and the plot like wise) play a poor woman's
brand of golf lulls the reader into expecting a serene
village cozy. However, once Helen makes her chip shot,
the British police procedural moves through eighteen fast
holes. The story line is humorous at times but never
loses sight that first and foremost is that there is an
official investigation into who killed and buried the head
in the sand. Catherine Aird's latest Sloan story is a
fine entry in a strong series. Harriet Klausner
Reviewed by Harriet Klausner
Posted July 15, 2005
|