31 May 2026
Having enjoyed my first Andrew Taylor novel 'The Scent of Death' (reviewed here in May 2026) I moved on to 'A Schooling in Murder' - his 2025 novel set in 1945 at the end of the War (between VE Day and VJ Day) at a girls' boarding school in the countryside near Gloucester. This book has a very different feel to 'The Scent of Death': it is more of a cosy country house murder mystery, in the style of (and constantly referencing) Agatha Christie (with nods to Dorothy L Sayers and Margery Allingham). It's also a ghost story (with the feel of Noel Coward's 'Blithe Spirit') as the tale is narrated by Annabel Warnock - a teacher at the school who is determined to find out who has just murdered her. There is more than one mystery here, with various suspicious goings-on involving pupils, teachers, servants and others. And there are many potential suspects for Annabel's murder. But this is quite a light-hearted murder story, which reminded me of Joanna Cannon's novels ‘The Trouble with Goats and Sheep’ (reviewed here in January 2022) and 'Three Things About Elsie (reviewed here in November 2023). A very enjoyable set of puzzles - being simultaneously investigated by the ghostly narrator, teachers and pupils - with a very clever denouement.