A Bed of Scorpions by Judith Flanders

A Bed of Scorpions (Sam Clair, #2)

by Judith Flanders

What's an editor to do with so many demands? Do you deal with the morning's pile of manuscript submissions first? Or the swine from sales who steals all the chocolate digestives? Or do you concentrate on your ex-lover, whose business partner has just been found dead in their art gallery, slumped over his desk with a gun in his hand? It's another day at Timmins & Ross publishing house, but when sharp-tongued editor Samantha Clair's CID boyfriend is brought in to investigate Frank Compton's death, her loyalties become stretched. And when one of Aidan Merriam's artists is found dead in identical circumstances, Sam takes on the art world and the CID, armed with nothing more than her reliable weapons: satire, cynicism and a stock of irrelevant information culled from novels.

Reviewed by MurderByDeath on

4.5 of 5 stars

Share

Wow, I'm having a good run of great books lately.  Judith Flanders is best known for her exceptional non-fiction (micro-history, mainly) but a couple of years ago she dipped her toe into mystery with A Murder of Magpies and it was very good but maybe a little bit chaotic.  I think her sophomore offering, A Bed of Scorpions is better.

My preference might have to do with the plot: Sam's old-flame-turned-good-friend owns a prestigious art gallery and I've been attracted by all things art lately.  Aidan finds his partner dead in his office of an apparent suicide but with no reason to kill himself.  It might also have to do with Sam and Jake's chemistry; it's there, you can feel the pull, you know it's simmering just beneath the surface, but it's not being rushed.

The murder plotting was another skilfully plotted crime; Flanders lead me down the path (Sam and I both), only to make me do a forehead slap at the end.  What's more, the clues were all there from the beginning so all points to Flanders.

Whatever the reason, I found the story smoothly paced, exciting, and the dialogue witty.  I like all the characters and that almost never happens.  I love the dynamic between Sam and her mother Helena and the scene at the dinner party was priceless.

This is a cozy for grown-ups with a strong female lead and I'm really looking forward to the third book out next year.

Last modified on

Reading updates

  • Started reading
  • 18 July, 2016: Finished reading
  • 18 July, 2016: Reviewed