Skip to main content

Member Reviews

The Liar in the Library opens with Jude Nichols - healer, Sauvignon Blanc drinker, Fethering resident - is attending an 'Author's Evening' at he local public library. The speaker is Burton St. Clair, author of a recent bestselling romance novel. As it happens Jude knew the writer many years ago when he was married to her friend Megan and his name was Albert Sinclair. When St. Clair offers Jude a ride home at the conclusion of the event, he makes a pass at her and she walks off. When St. Clair is found dead in his car in the library parking lot, Jude becomes the prime suspect. So of course, Jude and her neighbor Carole Seddon investigate.

This book is the 18th in the series, but I read it without having read any of its predecessors. At least in this book Jude and Carole don't seem very close, and don't seem to like each other much, so I assume the previous books establishes their relationship - either that or they really are just 'friends' due to their proximity to each other and their mutual appreciate for New Zealand Sauvignon Blanc.

This is a pretty simple mystery, and felt very contrived - like the police's complete focus on Jude as a suspect, evidently based only on her interaction with St. Clair following the library event and a bunch of lies told to them by St. Clair's first wife. Anyone looking for a light mystery, or who has read previous books in this series and enjoyed the characters and the town of Fethering will probably enjoy this book.

Was this review helpful?

This book is not for me at all. I really was disappointed with it.
I am sure that if you have read other books by this author then you may enjoy it

Was this review helpful?

The Liar in the Library is the 18th installment in the series, but my first . It can be read as a stand-alone but I do recommend reading others first for a better understanding of the characters and their relationships. I really enjoyed this.story.

Sleazy author Burton St Clair has been murdered. Late last night, his wandering hands found their way onto Jude and today the police are on her doorstep. Not only was Jude at the library-cum-crime scene, but she was the last person to see Burton St Clair alive. Now a prime suspect, Jude recruits Carole to dust off their detecting skills and prove Jude’s innocence.

Prim and proper Carole Seddon is a textbook Fethering citizen, but her neighbor, Jude, the bohemian healer with a colorful past, is not. Despite their differences, they make for an unbeatable, amateur sleuthing team and their skills are needed now more than ever.

Full of wonderful characters that are well rounded, reminds of a Miss Marple type of village characters and setting. I found it had a good plot and that there were enough.red herrings to keep me guessing.till almost the end. I highly recommend this to anyone who likes Agatha Christie mysteries.

I requested and received an advanced reader copy from Netgalley and the publisher. All thoughts and opinions are my OWN.

Was this review helpful?

I was unaware this is the 18th book in a series when I requested it. I tried to read it as a standalone but I was missing too many details and important context. As such, I will be unable to finish this book and/or post a thoughtful review. Thank you for your consideration.

Was this review helpful?

The Liar in the Library by Simon Brett is a classic whodunit. Set in a quaint English seaside town and filled with characters that feel like friends and aquaintces within a few pages. The book seems to follow a know pattern, discuss the pattern and be a delightful read. Highly recommend it for lovers of a good mystery or whodunit.

Was this review helpful?

My first in the now 18-strong series, and I thoroughly enjoyed this. Jude and Carole make a great amateur investigative team as they look into the death of an old acquaintance of Jude's, a rather awful writer who'd been speaking at Fethering Library.

I did actually peg the murderer (thanks to a subtle tip from another reviewer), but then second-guessed myself, only to find that I was initially correct! It's good old-fashioned detective work in the modern world. Jude is rather au fait with all things technological while Carole prefers the old-school method and telephones people for appointments, etc., in order to speak with them. There's a nice tie-in with the Golden Age mysteries and how they were solved.

I'll definitely be going back to the beginning of this series. It was a great read.

Was this review helpful?

The Liar in the Library is a crime novel which, ironically, dissects crime novels. There’s a murder in the Fethering Library and all of the people in the small town become “amateur sleuths”, trying to find the killer, while at the same time, some of them are also suspects in the murder.

The book borders with obsession when it comes to the crime genre. It goes into the depths of the perfect murder according to the Golden Age crime novels. In fact, it focuses so deeply on how the murder should be solved, that it kills the suspense, because everyone is rambling on and on about how hard it is to be a crime book author, how crime books are written, what would crime book characters do and so on. For God’s sake… this is a crime book, give it a rest.

It felt suspiciously as if the author was describing his personal struggles as such, as well as the problems of the publishing world, and his own love for “the Golden Age”. Be it so, or not, it was exasperating, because it made the book a lot less thrilling and a lot more methodical. If you’re still unsure what I mean, imagine porn but with your biology teacher from middle school in the background narrating about the act of inserting the penis into the vagina.

Another thing that quite frankly annoyed me was that the author was supposedly being judgmental about the negative attitude of some British people toward Polish immigrants, all the while also writing the following:

“(…) Then he changes, you know, like Jekyll and Hyde.” [this is Zosia, the only Polish character that speaks in the book]

Jude was impressed by the girl’s command of British literature, as she went on (…)

It’s so impressive that a Polish person happens to know about one of the most famous books in the world? I would say that a vast majority of the Polish people most probably have a better grasp of British literature than a lot of British people do. Frankly, I found this sentence quite hypocritical, considering how the author is also trying to defend the Poles, both before and after that offhand statement. If there’s a proof of xenophobia, it’s found exactly in such remarks, said without much thought or deliberation. And bear with me, I’m not an easily offended person at all. I do, however, happen to be living in Poland, and all we see of British people here is this (ALL the time), and yet, I haven’t allowed that to form my opinion of all British people.

That little rant aside, the story itself was also kind of bland, the murderer’s motive kind of convoluted and the main characters, Jude and Carole, kind of bitchy. Not my cup of tea.

Was this review helpful?

A good mystery and well written, a cozy whodunnit that is part of a series. Light and enjoyable for a cold winters night.

Was this review helpful?

This is a proper detective book. It’s well thought out and well written.
Great read.
Thank you to both NetGalley and Blackthorn for my eARC in exchange for my honest unbiased review

Was this review helpful?

Thanks to Netgalley for an ARC of this book, in exchange for a fair and honest review.

Like Brett's previous books, this is a fun, enjoyable read. I always enjoyed his Charles Paris mysteries, and the Fethering books are equally enjoyable. I particularly liked the references to golden age mysteries, including the book within a book.

It's a fairly typical cozy mystery, in that the amateurs figure things out long before the police do. An added twist here is that Jude, one of our heroines, is the prime suspect in the case.

While this is #18 in the Fethering series, you don't need to have read the others to enjoy this one. I've read the first few, but not most of the others in the series, and this book can stand nicely on its own - although, I now plan to go back and read the ones I've missed.

It's an enjoyable, pleasurable read.

Was this review helpful?

I put this book under the cozy mystery category. As such it was an easy and enjoyable read.
I liked the two main woman characters and how they interacted with each other. The police appeared to be arrogant and you might shake your head at some of the character portrayed.

Was this review helpful?

One of the latest 'very enjoyable' detective books I've read in such a long time. Very good indeed and also full of the mysterious feeling of the detective world set in the British environment with the casual occasional murder. Very good indeed!

Was this review helpful?

Such a cozy fun read. It was a bit easy to guess but that didn’t matter or make it any less good to me because of the characters the setting and the cozy quality of the writing. I love a book like this in between heavier books. Perfect to cozy up with on a rainy day! Loved it

Was this review helpful?

Really well plotted mystery. I liked the village setting with all the gossiping, very Miss Marple. I found the unlikeable characters a bit too over the top.

Was this review helpful?

I found this book to be very entertaining and thoroughly enjoyed reading it. I would recommend this book to those who enjoy this genre.

Was this review helpful?

Boring! The description I read on NetGalley mentioned an inspector. I did not realize this was a late installment in a cozy series. A man allergic to walnuts meets his death from something laced with walnuts. For those new to the series, the characters are not well-enough developed in this book to make it enjoyable. I did not enjoy it and really wish it had been a police procedural instead of a cozy. I received an advance electronic book through NetGalley with the expectation of an honest review.

Was this review helpful?

This was just not the book for me. It was obvious, boring, and a giant cliche. Sorry, I am not a fan of this book.

Was this review helpful?

This is the 18th book in a series about Jude and Carole, two unlikely friends on the South coast.
As a reader of the first 17 this did exactly what I wanted it to - the characters don't change, the mystery is a decent mystery.

Was this review helpful?

This is a light, easy read. I believe it is one from a series, though it holds up well as a standalone. I did find the description of one character seemed a bit dated , though overall I enjoyed this book.

Was this review helpful?

Whilst this appears to be the 18th book in the series this is my first book I have read by Simon Brett.

It was a very easy and quick read and I enjoyed the different characters viewpoints however because I don't know the backstory I think they weren't that well developed. I also felt the murderer was too obvious.

Thank you to netgalley for giving me an ARC.

Was this review helpful?