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At Balaclava Agricultural College, a kidnapping and pig-napping are followed by murder Newlyweds Peter and Helen Shandy are picking out flatware when a pair of gun-toting hooligans burst into the silversmith's shop, empty the safe, and leave with Helen as their hostage. Although the police recover Helen quickly, her professor husband is badly shaken by the ordeal. Early the next morning, the college's head of animal husbandry frantically reports another hostage situation in progress. Belinda, the school's beloved sow, has been kidnapped, and only Peter can bring home the bacon. There is a possible witness to the pig-napping in Miss Flackley, the farrier, but before she can point Peter towards the vanished porker, she is found dead in the barn's mash feeder. By the time Peter discovers the link between the two heists, pigs may really fly.… (more)
User reviews
I enjoyed the lightness of spirit in this book, along with the many references to Viking deities and literary folks, though I admit, some of it seemed thrown in to show how clever the author is. The mystery was solvable, but not spoiled by that fact. Though I never laughed out loud, I did get some smiles from this and I will read more of this author's work.
Style: Airy persiflage and
Robbery is the order of the day. As if the loss of roughly half a million dollars' worth of silver and gold from honest craftsmen weren't enough, the college's prize sow has been pignapped. If you've ever lost your not-yet-saved important document to a power outage or some other computer problem, you may have some inkling of how Professor Stott feels about Belinda's loss. After all, she's the end product of nearly 30 years of his life's work -- and about due to have her first litter.
The Balaclava County Draft Horse Association's annual competition is coming up. Will the Balaclava Brigade prevail against the Lolloping Lumberjacks of Lumpkin Corners and the Headless Horsemen of Hodderville? (Be sure not to miss the story about the year someone from Hoddersville put itching powder in the back of Svenson's overalls just before his start at the Senior Plowman Event. It's no wonder his nickname among the college students is "King Kong".)
Professor Shandy has to track down Belinda, solve a few red herrings, and help ensure the right person gets arrested. There are colorful characters aplenty, witty dialog, a good vocabulary, and a fun way of telling the readers How Things Turned Out at the end.
There are also some genuinely good, decent characters behaving decently as a contrast to the mean-spirited characters who don't seem to be happy unless they're putting others in the wrong, even if they have to make up the facts to do it.
I like Balaclava Agricultural College's work-study program, how its endowment fund is handled, and its policy about students and booze. That reminds me -- another introduction here is to the Balaclava Boomerang, made of home-hardened cider and homemade cherry brandy. It sounds pretty potent.
Ch.8 is where we learn that one of Helen's grandfathers was a Deacon Marsh.
Yes, this cover is among the reasons I got very tired of skulls on the covers of mystery books, but the horseshoe is proper to the story. Pardon me while I move on to rereading book three.
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I bought this on offer for less than a pound, but I won’t be buying any more from Open Road unless they bring their prices down and do their job properly.
This was ok. I liked the first in the series better. This was pretty slow-moving. Some of the terminology felt… pretentious? (Trying to come up with a good word.) Maybe it was supposed to be, since there are so many academics in the book? I did lose interest periodically, so I missed how they figured out “who dun it”, though at least I did catch the “who”. I will read the next book in the series before deciding if I want to continue further.