The puffins on this book cover are adorable, the bright blue backdrop serene. Even the girl clinging to the cliff edge for dear life has a comfortingly cartoonish quality. But Leslie Meier's Invitation Only Murder, the 2019 installment in her popular Lucy Stone series, is more creepy than cozy.
Reporter-slash-sleuth Lucy is at it again. But this time she's ventured from the relative safety of Tinker's Cove to an island frozen in the nineteenth century. Peculiar patriarch and billionaire Scott Newman has plunged his family, which includes his second wife, two sets of twins, and a skeleton crew of salt-of-the-earth staff, into the ultimate eco-warrior experiment: modern life minus modern conveniences. No cell phones, TVs, or electricity. Or, as they said on Gilligan's Island, not a single luxury (although even the Professor had a coconut radio). Just miles and miles of pristine Maine countryside -- where no one can hear you scream.
And you thought your family was crazy.
Scott claims it's all in the name of protecting Mother Earth, but his controlling ways suggest that something far more sinister is afoot. And then someone turns up dead, with two more lost in the fog-shrouded forest. I couldn't help but think that this setup of a strange, wealthy family marooned in the boonies had an air of Agatha Christie. And when I got to the part where Lucy tries to talk herself off the ledge, my hunch was confirmed:
"Get a grip, she told herself, determined to resist the paranoia that seemed to be infecting the house. This isn't an Agatha Christie story; people aren't going to disappear one by one, slain by a killer intent on avenging a past wrong." (167-168)
But rattled or not, Lucy isn't one to throw in the towel. So, like Hercule Poirot, she puts her little gray cells to the test. She's not a journalist for nothing; her ease with people and observational skills prove invaluable as she works to unmask the killer.
Invitation Only Murder wasn't what I expected. It's grimmer than the average Lucy Stone caper, going so far as to include a description of Scott's faithful servant laying out a dead body. Nevertheless, I found it intriguing, spellbound by the eerie vibe and fog to find out if the good guys -- whoever they were -- would survive.
And also, at the very least, it made me appreciate Wi-Fi.