June Wright wrote this lost gem in the mid-1950s, but consigned it to
her bottom drawer after her publisher foolishly rejected it. Perhaps it
was a little ahead of its time? Because while it's a tour de force of
the classic country-house murder mystery, it's also a delightful romp,
poking fun at the conventions of the genre. When someone takes advantage
of a duck hunt to murder publisher Athol Sefton at a remote hunting inn,
it soon turns out that virtually everyone, guests and staff alike, had a
good reason for shooting him. Sefton's nephew Charles thinks he can
solve the crime by applying the "rules of the game" he's absorbed from
his years as a reviewer of detective fiction -- only the killer
evidently isn't playing by those rules. Duck Season Death is a both a
fiendishly clever whodunit and a marvelous entertainment.