Murder at the Lighthouse, Frances Evesham
Murder at the Lighthouse, Frances Evesham
List: $11.99 | Sale: $8.40
Club: $5.99

Murder at the Lighthouse

Author: Frances Evesham

Narrator: Jennifer M. Dixon

Unabridged: 4 hr 6 min

Format: Digital Audiobook Download

Publisher: Tantor Media

Published: 12/05/2017


Synopsis

Everyone knows the dead woman under the lighthouse, but no one seems to know why she died. What brought the folk-rock star back to Exham on Sea after so many years? Who wanted her dead? Does the key to her murder lie in the town, or far away across the Atlantic?

Libby Forest arrives in Exham to build a new life making cakes and chocolates, and discovers a talent for solving mysteries, helped by Bear, an enormous Carpathian Sheepdog, and a cast of local characters.

The green fields, rolling hills and sandy beaches of England's West Country provide a perfect setting for crime, intrigue and mystery.

About Frances Evesham

One day, Frances Evesham walked on a beach in peaceful Somerset and came upon a unique nine-legged Victorian lighthouse. Her first cozy crime story, Murder at the Lighthouse, was born. Now, she writes mystery stories: the Exham on Sea contemporary cozy crime series set in a small Somerset seaside town, and the Thatcham Hall Mysteries, nineteenth-century historical mystery romances set in Victorian England. She collects poison recipes and cooks with a glass of wine in one hand and a bunch of chilies in the other, her head full of ingenious ways to dispatch her victims-in fiction, of course. She's been a speech therapist and a road sweeper, and worked in the criminal courts seeing crime from all points of view: victim, prosecution, and defense. Spending time in the dock and the witness box alongside witnesses taught her more about motive, means, and opportunity than she could ever have imagined.


Reviews

Goodreads review by Anita

There are way too many leaps in the logic in this book. At least three times I got the distinct feeling that some particular thing needed to be the next step, therefore it was. There was no real evidence ever given that the second death was a murder. The author needed it to be that so the main chara......more