The 13th book in the Royal Spyness series finds Georgie and her new husband Darcy in Kenya on the eve of World War II, where they investigate an apparent murder and learn about the loathsome lifestyles of the British colonizers of the African nation.
...Rhys Bowen does a marvelous job of plunging the shocked newlyweds into a hedonistic swirl of drugs, alcohol, and casual infidelity ... Like an Agatha Christie mystery, there are many people who have a reason to dislike and despise the late Lord Cheriton ... Rhys Bowen weaves the barely perceptible tension between the African servants (some enduring almost slave-like conditions) and their European masters into her fascinating story of murder in a unique time and place that’s occupied by a vivid cast of characters. Readers will appreciate Bowen’s willingness to stretch the limits of her series to examine the attitudes and mores of a troubled period.
Fans who read the books for the light humor may be disappointed, but those who appreciate Bowen's knowledge of the pre- and postwar years...will be receptive to the atmospheric historical details.
Bowen provides more social commentary than usual in this lighthearted series, revealing the careless bigotry and racism of the aristocratic Brits in Kenya, and the tale is all the better for it.