Member Reviews
this was… fine? i really liked the idea and in a lot of ways its very well executed, but the wrap up at the end went wayyy to fast & the ending was too predictable.
Brought To Book is the first book in the Rona Parish series by British author, Anthea Fraser. Just as author, Rona Parish is ready to take a break from writing biographies, there’s a request from the widow of a thriller writer who drowned somewhat mysteriously six months earlier. Rona’s semi-detached husband, illustrator Max Allerdyce feels she should approach it with caution.
Her twin sister, Lindsey, a junior partner with Chase Mortimer solicitors, encourages her, telling her it will be interesting, although she herself is rather distracted and disturbed by the unwelcome attentions of the not-long-divested ex-husband. Rona worries her sister’s loneliness might weaken her resolve against Hugh Cavendish’s charms, until another attractive man comes on the scene.
An interview with Meriel Harvey, widow of Theo, has Rona intrigued, especially as there are diaries written in code that might reveal just what led to the writer’s three-year block and subsequent radical alteration in style. But also present, Meriel’s cousin, Justin Grant seems to be trying to discourage her interest.
By the time a third person seems intent on steering her from the path, in the form of an anonymous note attached to her dog’s collar, Rona has decided nothing will put her off, and is pleased when the widow eventually allows her to examine the diaries at home. She interviews Theo’s family and friends, gaining some small insights with each encounter.
She and Max travel to the venue of Theo’s annual writing retreat, Mile End Cottage in the village of Spindlebury, where visits to the pub, The Plough produce several villagers more than happy to chat about the writer if it will help to solve his uncharacteristic change in demeanour and style.
Back home in Marsborough, though, it seems someone seems set on harassing Rona, and Max worries even more when their dog is poisoned. Rona becomes aware of certain vehicles tailing her, and begins to regret ever taking it on. But chats to people with whom Theo was seen, and the decrypted diaries reveal some shocking truths. Another murder brings home to Rona the danger she’s in. Despite some unresolved issues, this is an enjoyable cosy.
This unbiased review is from an uncorrected proof copy provided by NetGalley and Severn House
This is a solid who-done-it complete with a sweet furry companion.
I especially enjoyed the unconventional relationship the protagonist enjoyed with her partner.
What a magnificent start to a series! Enough clues to keep me guessing (and feel like the solution didn’t come out of nowhere) and plenty of backstory to propel the rest of the series.
I enjoyed this tale of an English writer writing a biography of a recently deceased author. The start is rather slow as we get introduced to all the family members and hear what they do and where they live and with whom and why. The writer's family, that is. But they do play a major role in the circumstances of the story, as to who is staying where on which night later and who knows what.
The mysterious late author had a history of writing thrillers, then had a mental block for a few years, then reappeared on the scene with two books which were better, darker and more haunted. And these two he typed himself instead of sending his longhand (the book was written in the early 2000s) to be typed. And I'm thinking, really, not again. This is a boilerplate plot and motive. Even in 2000 it wasn't new. Any writer, like our heroine, would have guessed. So I was just waiting it out, but fortunately there was enough going on in the background to keep my interest.
The heroine has a friendly dog. I am not a fan of plots which use an animal to demonstrate a threat. The dog survives, I hasten to add. But please don't do this.
I would happily read more of this middle-class series. However, we don't get much in the way of social comment or police procedures, it's more of a commentary on marriages, several of them.
I read an e-ARC from Net Galley. This is an unbiased review.
I read other books in this series but not this one that was on my TBR. A well plotted and entertaining cozy mystery, a solid and twisty story that kept me guessing and surprised often.
Excellent storytelling and character development
Highly recommended.
Many thanks to the publisher for this ARC, all opinions are mine
This is a readable mystery but for me it just didn't hit the mark. First in the series so I look forward to reading the others in this series.
I like the main character Rona Perish and I foudn thre were the twists and turns you would expect. A good story, entertaining with good characters and was entertaining to read. I enjoyed it and found it an easy to read book but there just seemed to be something missing for me so I would give it 3 1/2 stars for sure.
Thank you NetGalley and Severn House for giving me the opportunity to read and review this book.
Biographer Rona Parish has an intriguing new assignment when she’s commissioned to write the biography of bestselling author Theo Harvey. Famous not only for his thrillers but also for his three year writer’s block followed by two bizarrely different novels back to back, his death had an air of mystery as well. Accidental drowning, suicide, or murder? These are questions his widow hopes Rona can answer.
While interviewing those closest to Harvey as well as those who saw him the weekend of his death, Rona seems to stir a hornet’s nest, a move made clear by anonymous threats to both her and Meriel Harvey. While her husband Max — with whom she has an unconventional but happy living arrangement — worries for her safety and questions the wisdom of pursuing the project in light of these threats, he nonetheless proves a solid partner in putting together the mystery surrounding Harvey’s writing career and death. Max is especially key in solving the code Harvey used to write his journals.
With a cozy English village setting, a faithful dog Gus, and other characters such as Roma’s identical twin and her parents, this was an overall enjoyable book and Anthea Fraser has the ability to make the reader feel they’re there in the scene. Despite being written twenty years ago, it doesn’t feel overly dated. A few times Rona acted foolishly, and one part of the story’s resolution could be seen coming (although perhaps not in detail), but it moved at a good pace and had twisty bits at the end.
Thank you to NetGalley and the publishers for the opportunity to read and review this book.
Not too sure about the cover – it has a distinctly 1940s vibe to me. Whereas this offering feels as if it’s firmly set in the here and now. I enjoy the fact that Rona’s marriage is a bit different – she and her husband live in separate houses as they both are creatives and need very different surroundings in order to create. She is also one of twins and I liked the edge of sibling exasperation that characterises her relationship with her sister. In fact, Rona is quite a cool customer, as she is a self-contained person with a huge curiosity about other people’s lives. Nonetheless, that doesn’t stop her from being thoroughly upset when the inevitable dead body pops up.
The plotting in this one is well done, with a steady building of tension and a sense of wrongness. I was genuinely shocked when the murder occurred – I hadn’t expected this particular person to die and thought it was very well done. As Rona continues to investigate Theo Harvey’s life, I found I was also caught up in discovering what made him tick. Fraser has a knack for pulling the reader into the world she has created – I could easily visualise each setting. The pacing is also well balanced. In common with many whodunits, this one starts relatively slowly and gathers momentum as Rona is increasingly caught up in Theo’s life and learns more about him.
The denouement also came as a bit of a shock. While there was a gratifying number of possible suspects – the ultimate culprit wasn’t someone I’d previously suspected. Yet their motivation is absolutely compelling and a bit heartbreaking. All in all, this is a thoroughly satisfying murder mystery that has stayed in my head since I read it, executed by an author who is clearly experienced and at the top of their game. Highly recommended for fans of whodunits that don’t go in for lots of guts or gore, but nonetheless still pack a bit of an emotional punch. While I obtained an arc of Brought to Book from the publishers via Netgalley, the opinions I have expressed are unbiased and my own.
9/10
A fine British cosy mystery, the first in a series of reissues, originally published in 2003 with nine total books following. In BROUGHT TO BOOK, biographer Rona Parish is asked to write the bio of thriller author Theo Harvey. His mysterious death by drowning left many unanswered questions, as did his return to writing three years ago after a long hiatus. The narrative kept me thoroughly engaged as the unguessable mystery was worked out, and there is even a wonderful dog (Rona's retriever, Gus.) Recommended!
First published twenty years ago, this supremely cozy, very definitely page-turning first-in-series mystery introduces a biographer sleuth...first time I've run into that one!...with a happily unconventional home life, a tidy income from her main career, and a bottomless well of curiosity. It felt to me like a story, and is told in a style, from sixty years ago.
I do not intend an insult with this statement of an observation.
Gender politics will derail any discussion of why I personally find myself squicked out by stalkery behavior. The cultural conversation about this behavior was only just getting started back then, so I can't really point a shaming finger at it; just something I myownself find unpleasant to read. This book, like some of the ones we labeled "romantic" many decades ago, valorizes some things I characterize as really stalkery behavior. That's a very big nope from me. I get it, in the sense that, at a point near the end of the story, the plot really needed something to happen at precisely that juncture. Why the other something that was in already set in motion by a different character and was, in fact, in progress and that occurs with near simultaneity wasn't enough for the author only she knows. A choice she made that I was appalled by, and it really caused me to reassess the prior appearances of the stalkery character in a much less flattering (to the author) light.
A trope that just won't die is the villain infodump. There is one of these at the end. I really rolled my eyes so hard I saw my brain as the guilty party settles in for a cozy chat with people whose murders are essential to the sociopath's happy getaway. The sociopaths I've known wouldn't be that careless. This is, from their point of view, a necessary act not to be lingered over because the risk to them getting away with their awful decision decrease with every delay or diversion from its accomplishment. I've never known a stupid sociopath.
The age of the story shows in multiple ways, eg the fact that Rona goes to her publisher's office and hands him an envelope with a printed version of an article she's submitting. Wow, does that take me back...no one even five years later would conceptualize this as a possibility! It's actually a bit wistfully charming. It dates events, but that's not necessarily bad...just a passing note for informative purposes.
The series character's world is most charmingly set up, and I would absolutely love to live in that village. I would be seriously surprised if a revelation that genuinely shocked me regarding Rona's twin wasn't going to loom large in a future installment. The changing technology of the day wasn't ignored, because Rona does look up the subject of her proposed biography on the Internet (still capitalized back then) and discusses what she's found with the subject's widow. Rona also notes the biography subject's lack of a computer to the widow. So it became even more odd in my eyes that she submitted her article on paper.
There is an instance of an animal being harmed, but it is set up so that the event, while bad, doesn't kill the animal in question. It is used, I felt, gratuitously, though it's later revealed to have been the last straw for the one committing the harmful act. It fell short of my slam-the-book-shut threshold because it's clear there's not going to be fatal outcome very soon after it occurs.
What I most want to convey to you is how high my hopes were set up, and then to be let down by the issues I've detailed above was a deep disappointment. There was every reason to think I'd found a ten-book series that's clearly complete (the most recent was published in 2017) to dive into.
Unfortunately that's not to be. I don't care to risk my own money on books that bid fair to repeat these kinds of unwelcome to me tropes.
Theo Harvey, a successful thriller writer, is dead. His widow approaches the biographer, Rona Parish, to write his life story. Armed with detailed diaries, Rona soon uncovers secrets.
The first in a long-running series, so more to immerse yourself in if you like this. A well plotted and thoroughly entertaining cosy mystery. It even had a loveable dog!
The ending felt a little rushed, hence 4 stars.
Thank you NetGalley and Severn House for sending this book for review. All opinions are my own.
I am sorry- i made a mistake and posted the wrong review to you. i have not yet read this book and will review it when i am finished it.
Thanks to the publisher and Netgalley for the ARC.
This is the first book in a series (originally published 20 years ago, and I guess just being released electronically?) about Rona, a writer/biographer/researcher.
Much is made of the fact that she and her husband have no kids and separate households because they both work from home and drive each other crazy. They have a very upper middle class lifestyle (or 2) in a perfect English village. They eat out A LOT - I was amazed by the amount of time we spend with Rona describing lunch and dinner and food and wine!
Rona is asked to write a biography of a famous thriller author who died somewhat mysteriously.
The widow blows hot and cold about the bio, even though she's the one who asked to have it written in the first place.
Rona's (twin) sister is involved in a complicated subplot that eventually has something to do with the biography.
The 'mystery' got solved in the end but it didn't seem very logical.
I found the book pretty dull and I didn't like any of the characters - I don't know if this series will continue in this vein or improve - I know that the author gets good reviews, maybe just not my taste?
Would probably appeal to fans of Murder She Wrote or Midsummer Murders.
For me this was a 2.5 out of 5
This first book in the Rona Parish mystery series by Anthea Fraser has it all…engrossing mystery, family drama, and a charming setting.
Rona Parish, a biography writer, is contacted by the widow of a famous thriller author. The author had died under mysterious circumstances, and the widow wants Rona to write his biography. As she begins to investigate not only his life but surprising death, she and the widow are warned off by anonymous notes and and calls.
The mystery kept me guessing, and the interviews with people in the deceased author’s circle were interesting. But, in addition to the mystery, the personal lives of Rona and family helped make this such a great read. Rona and her husband don’t live together, but they have a great marriage and even a decent partnership in sleuthing. Her sister, newly divorced, also provided a side story.
All in all, a very well written cozy mystery.
Rona Parrish has been commissioned to write a biography of the recently deceased author Theo Harvey. Though he’s only been dead 6 months, his widow wants Rona to investigate his life and fill in the missing pieces of his final years. Theo had always been a “life and soul of the party” until 2 years before his death when he became depressed and reclusive. Shortly after agreeing to the project Rona becomes the victim of menacing letters, phone calls, and stalking. Undeterred to the despair of her husband, Rona refuses to give up the research and the threats become increasingly sinister resulting in murder and poisoning.
The first novel in a series that is worth pursuing. Originally published twenty years ago, it is still relevant and enjoyable. Carefully written with all characters, both primary and secondary fully developed. A cosy in the lack of superfluous blood, language, and sex, it feels more contemporary with thriller aspects. Likable characters with an engaging plot, this is easy to recommend to most ages.
Thank you to netgalley and Severn House for this advance copy .
Thank you NetGalley and Severn Publishing for the eARC.
What an enjoyable book! I loved this first in the 10-book Rona Parrish series a lot and have already ordered another one. I had read a couple of them ages ago and each one is as good as the others.
Rona is asked by the widow of a famous thriller writer to write his biography. Little does she know , even though her husband Max tells her not to accept the commission, the danger that awaits her.
I love Rona, her husband Max and her sweet dog Gus. But I haven't made up my mind about her twin sister, she seems a bit selfish, I'll wait to make decision once I have read a few more of the books.
Highly recommended for lovers of cozy reads with a bite!
Brought to Book is the first Rona Parish cozy mystery by Anthea Fraser. Originally published in 2003, this reformat and re-release is from Severn House, has 224 pages and is available in ebook format. Other editions available in other formats. It's worth noting that the ebook format has a handy interactive table of contents as well as interactive links. I've really become enamored of ebooks with interactive formats lately.
This is a beautifully well written, eminently readable, and entertaining cozy mystery; the first in the series of 10 books. The protagonist is a well regarded and intelligent biographer who is approached to write a biography of a recently deceased famous author and finds that his life and death might be much more complex that anyone was previously aware.
The plot is intricate and the mystery so well constructed. The author has a gift with descriptive prose and there is no "telling" and all "showing". Ms. Fraser manages to convey mood and setting effectively and seamlessly.
As befits the genre, the language is relatively clean (a few "bloodies", "damn" and a single "buggered" (used as a mild idiomatic curse, not literally)), and the violence is off-page. There is a poisoning, of the MC's golden retriever, Gus. No spoilers, but I didn't throw the book out the window. Spelling and vernacular are standard British English, but won't pose problems in context for readers elsewhere.
Wonderfully written and worthwhile. With 10 books in the series, it would be a perfect candidate for a long binge or buddy read, as well as a nice side project for a mystery book club to tackle. There are worthwhile discussion themes and interestingly varied characters.
Four and a half stars. Sincere hopes that Severn House's plans include new editions for the rest of the series.
Disclosure: I received an ARC at no cost from the author/publisher for review purposes.
Murder And Mystery…
The first in the Rona Parish mystery series of reissues and a wonderful start and introduction to the series as a whole. Meet Rona, a biographer, who not only seems to have an ingrained talent for recording past lives but also for attracting murder and mystery along the way - not forgetting her trusty Golden Retriever Gus. In this first in series Rona is tasked with completing the biography of an acclaimed author - but there will be way more to this than meets the eye. Wholly enjoyable and entertaining with a colourful and eclectic cast of characters, a compelling plot laced with red herrings, a lively narrative and an attractive protagonist in Rona herself. More in the series is much anticipated.