Reviews for Scarlet fever : a novel

Publishers Weekly
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In bestseller Brown’s genial, smoothly written 12th novel set in Virginia horse country (after 2018’s Homeward Hound), antiques shop owner Harry Dunbar, who apparently took a fatal fall down some steep steps, is mourned by his fellow members of the Jefferson Hunt Club, except for Drew Taylor. Without offering any proof, Drew accused Harry of “cheating him and seducing his late mother.” When hounds find the body of Drew’s brother, who suffered from dementia, hidden under some brush, Harry’s close friend Jane Arnold (aka Sister), the club’s Master of Foxhounds, fears the two deaths may be connected. The sudden arrival of Harry’s wife, whom no one knew existed, and the discovery of an expensive woman’s ring in Harry’s pocket add to Sister’s suspicions. The opening cast of characters, which includes background on both people and talking animals, will be particularly useful to newcomers, who will soon figure out that the philosophical commentary of a host of humans, horses, foxhounds, foxes, and other four-footed creatures matters more than the sleuthing. Series fans will welcome the wealth of detail about the fox hunting world. (Nov.)


Kirkus
Copyright © Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

A 12th round of vaguely homicidal doings for the worthies of Virginia's Jefferson Hunt (Homeward Hound, 2018, etc.).What is it with antiques shop owner Harry Dunbar? First he finds a Louis XV desk just like the one that was stolen from Master of Foxhounds Jane "Sister" Arnold years ago. Then he tells Sister that he's willing to sell it to her and her partner, retired D.C. accountant Gray Lorillard, for a mere $20,000, since it's only an 18th-century replica. Then, before she can make up her mind, he's found dead at the bottom of the side staircase at Horse Country, Marion Maggiolo's plush equine-themed gift shop. Did he fall, or was he pushed? That question would be front and center among a more dclass crowd, but the question of foul play hardly seems to arise among the members of the Hunt, whose preoccupation with the avocation around which so many of them have organized their lives has left precious little time for extraneous gossip. And what gossip there is has focused on Morris Taylor, whose former career working on nuclear reactors has been overshadowed by the onset of a senile dementia whose main symptom is that "he says what everyone else is thinking." While Morris' older brother, insurance executive Drew, and Morris' motherless son, Bainbridge, whose own favored avocations favor drugs and liquor, fret over what to do about their increasingly unpredictable relative, Sister, assisted by a gallery of regulars, from Gray's 94-year-old aunt, Daniella Laprade, to Anne "Tootie" Harris, a divorcing ex-model's daughter who dropped out of Princeton to come home and hunt, makes the most ritualistically discreet inquiries imaginable about a body count that will soon include more than Harry Dunbar's body.The cast of characters includes 28 foxhounds, 20 horses, 16 foxes, 3 birds, 3 house pets, and 25 humans. Tally-ho! Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

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