Cover Image: A Grave Misunderstanding: A Simon Grave Mystery

A Grave Misunderstanding: A Simon Grave Mystery

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Member Reviews

Thanks for NetGalley for the ARC for my Kindle.
The book was like a game of Clue- murder, mystery, and who done it. The book could have been set in the 1970's, but there was too many references to cellphones, robots, etc. It was just o.k. for me.

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Well,this is in the first place a locked room mystery and to be frank,it is not a bad one but.....there are some inconsistencies, the story feels as if it is written in the fifties(manor house,crust free sandwiches,butler,gardener,maids....)but apart from the family the manor is also inhabited by a dozen or so robots(androids). And then there is the author's ideas about women, they are either drop dead gorgeous (and sexy)or the ravages of time are clearly visible(and mentioned).Great!
Furthermore,as this is supposed to be a comedy(I suppose, not really sure what it is..)the brilliant, witty humour completely bypassed me(and I mean completely !)
2 stars for the murder mystery....

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Most mysteries I've read try to confine themselves to one genre. This one couldn't decide if it was a locked room mystery, a country house murder, light science fiction mystery with robots, humorous cozy mystery with puns out the backside or what.
The story really reads like a period piece, so much so that references to cell phones, Star Wars, apps and Uber, came as interruptions, yanking me out of the narrative.

The language is jarringly uneven. It goes from Miss Marple prim straight to 'f-bombs' left right and center without any pause (and then back to Miss Marple).
There are also weirdly distracting asides, such as his watch never telling the proper time ("Ten minutes later, at exactly 44:37 according to his watch....") and several references to 'Duct Tape Wine-the wine that can fix anything'.

Much of the humor comes from having the main character, Inspector Simon Grave, forgetting things (Pratchett? Asimov? Heinlein?) and generally being a bumbling idiot. He often confuses things or forgets things. I would have attributed it to a Columbo or Monsieur Pampelmousse nod from the author, but unfortunately the feckless inspector doesn't get much better throughout the book.

This is a sidekick book, and in a weird twist (or maybe another nod to the peerless wit of Douglas Adams' SEP field), Graves' sergeant Blunt has some sort of minor cloaking field which makes it impossible for people to 'see' him properly.

All that aside, I enjoyed this weird uncategorizable book. I liked the strange 'Scooby Doo' ending. I liked all of the science fiction/android bits. I actually quite honestly look forward to any follow-up books from this author. I just can't try to think about what category to try to fit it into because it's impossible.

Three and a half stars

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This was not your typical murder/mystery. The whole story to me felt like one of those murder/mystery games that people play at someones home. The writing felt like if it was written in the 70's was it not for the references to emoji, robots and cellphones if would not have known better. Simon Grave was a strange but likable character that really put a smile on my face and poor Blunt, I'm still trying to figure out how he looks like. Likable characters a good plot and I enjoyed the story.

Thank you Black Rose Writing via Netgalley for the copy.

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would like to thank netgalley and the publisher for letting me read and review this book

a murder, a stolen trophy and a locked room full of murder suspects oh and not forgetting the androids

it all should have made for an interesting story...but i struggled with this one....though i kept going to see who the murderer was

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