
ABOUT THIS BOOK
PUBLISHER: Little, Brown Book Group
FORMAT: Hardback
ISBN: 9781845299552
RRP: £14.99
PAGES: 304
PUBLICATION DATE:
October 20, 2011
BUY THIS BOOK
As an Amazon Associate and Bookshop.org affiliate we earn from qualifying purchases.
Agatha Raisin as the Pig Turns
M. C. Beaton
Winter Parva, a traditional Cotswolds village next door to Carsely, has decided to throw a celebratory hog roast to mark the beginning of the winter holiday festivities and Agatha Raisin has arrived with friend and rival in the sleuthing business, Toni, to enjoy the merriment. But as the spit pig is carried towards the bed of fiery charcoal Agatha – and the rest of the village – realise that things aren’t as they seem…Very quickly it transpires that the spit pig is in fact Gary Beech, a policeman not much loved in Winter Parva. And although Agatha has every intention of leaving the affair to the police, she rapidly changes her mind when she finds out Gary’s ex-wife has hired Toni to investigate. Cantankerous and competitive as Agatha is, she has to now join the fray and try and solve the case herself! Praise for M C Beaton’s Agatha Raisin series: I know I once vowed to read only Agatha Christie for a year but I cheated. My No. 1 mistress, M.C. Beaton and her Agatha Raisin whodunits. Agatha is like Miss Marple with a drinking problem, a pack a day habit and major man lust. In fact, I think she may be living my dream life. Entertainment Weekly. Once again M. C.Beaton has concocted an amusing brew of mystery and romance that will keep her fans turning the pages. Publisher’s Weekly. Pure entertainment. The Guardian.
Reviews of Agatha Raisin as the Pig Turns
Like Midsomer Murders with wit and a bit of edge. Daily Telegraph
M. C. Beaton
This is M.C. Beaton’s 22nd Agatha Raisin mystery to date. She has written twenty-six Hamish Macbeth tales, as well as a quartet of Edwardian murder mysteries and series of six Regency Romance titles, which are all published by Constable. She divides her time between Paris, Istanbul and a village in the Cotswolds which is very much like Agatha’s beloved Carsely.