It’s not normal to start a book review by describing the end but Death on Deck by Verity Bright ends in such a thrilling chase on an ocean liner that I had to mention it first. It is thrilling, in more ways than one.
In Death on Deck, thirteenth in the 1920s Lady Eleanor Swift cosy mystery series, Eleanor is at last able to spend some time, her birthday, with her handsome beau Detective Chief Inspector Hugh Seldon. Except yet again, Hugh has to work instead. So Eleanor, offered a free ticket on the maiden transatlantic of the luxurious Celestiana ocean liner, takes Clifford and her staff with her across the Atlantic to New York. With echoes of Titanic, which sank ten years earlier, the descriptions of the accommodations, décor, furnishings, food and guests are beyond anything we have seen before in this series. Everything is going swimmingly until on a bitterly cold March night, Eleanor goes out onto deck to clear her thoughts. She thinks she is alone until she shivers and the hairs on her neck stand up. There are two dark shadows wrestling, a gunshot, then one of the shadows falls overboard. Racing to the scene, she stumbles on the murder weapon. It is a revolver, one she knows well.
Seldon, not knowing Eleanor is a guest onboard, is working undercover on the Celestiana. His gun is the murder weapon. Clifford and Ellie’s staff – housekeeper, cook and two maids are travelling too – identify Hugh’s cabin where he is valiantly trying to work despite suffering from extreme sea sickness. Of course the captain engages Seldon and Eleanor to investigate the murder, hoping they will solve the crime with discretion and the planned triumphant arrival of the liner into New York will not be wrecked. Ellie knows she has broken the law by not disclosing the murder weapon, but she will do anything to save Hugh.
Nothing goes to plan. Seldon is so ill he can hardly think straight, Eleanor’s usual slick questioning doesn’t seem to work on her fellow first class passengers, and every hour New York draws nearer. When another first class guest is murdered, Ellie fears Hugh will hang. This plot is full of twists and tumbles, false clues, over-the-top opulence and a cast of shady characters who all look very guilty. There is room for an attractive captain, who doesn’t appear in enough scenes, and a stowaway who proves critical at the end. Plus a dancefloor lothario, a card shark, an insufferable hotelier, a jobsworth master-at-arms and a femme fatale. Ellie’s staff, the ladies, travelling in second class, are under-used and some of the language slips into modern tones, but I loved it. The plot is pulled onwards by the thread of Ellie and Hugh’s growing recognition of their love.
Highly recommended. Read with delight over a weekend.
Read my review of other books in the Lady Eleanor Swift series:-
A VERY ENGLISH MURDER #1LADYELEANORSWIFT
DEATH AT THE DANCE #2LADYELEANORSWIFT
A WITNESS TO MURDER #3LADYELEANORSWIFT
MURDER IN THE SNOW #4LADYELEANORSWIFT
MYSTERY BY THE SEA #5LADYELEANORSWIFT
MURDER AT THE FAIR #6LADYELEANORSWIFT
A LESSON IN MURDER #7LADYELEANORSWIFT
DEATH ON A WINTER’S DAY #8LADYELEANORSWIFT
A ROYAL MURDER #9LADYELEANORSWIFT
THE FRENCH FOR MURDER #10LADYELEANORSWIFT
DEATH DOWN THE AISLE #11LADYELEANORSWIFT
MURDER IN AN IRISH CASTLE #12LADYELEANORSWIFT
If you like this, try:-
‘The Marlow Murder Club’ by Robert Thorogood #1MARLOWMURDERCLUB
‘A Rising Man’ by Abir Mukherjee #1WYNDHAM&BANERJEE
‘Fortune Favours the Dead’ by Stephen Spotswood #1PENTECOST&PARKER
And if you’d like to tweet a link to THIS post, here’s my suggested tweet:
#BookReview DEATH ON DECK by Verity Bright @BrightVerity https://wp.me/p2ZHJe-8sn via @SandraDanby


















