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Death of a Ghost (Albert Campion Mystery, #6)
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Archive: Albert Campion reads > Death of a Ghost by Margery Allingham - SPOILER Thread

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Susan | 13046 comments Mod
Death of a Ghost (1934) is the sixth Albert Campion mystery and one of our Jan/Feb 2019 Buddy Reads, as we continue this popular series.

John Lafcadio’s ambition to be known as the greatest painter since Rembrandt was not to be thwarted by a matter as trifling as his own death. A set of twelve sealed paintings is the bequest he leaves to his widow � together with the instruction that she unveil one canvas each year before a carefully selected audience.

Albert Campion is among the cast of gadabouts, muses and socialites gathered for the latest ceremony � but art is the last thing on the sleuth’s mind when a brutal stabbing occurs�.

Please feel free to post spoilers in this thread.


message 2: by Jill (last edited Jan 10, 2019 04:56AM) (new) - rated it 5 stars

Jill (dogbotsmum) | 2687 comments I liked this and although we found out who the murderer was very early on, I didn't think it detracted from the story at all.


Sandy | 4096 comments Mod
I enjoyed it as well and agree that knowing the murderer early did not spoil the story. Max was quite an inventive villain and I was worried for the elderly matriarch. He would have gotten away with Campion's murder as it was staged so well, with so many witnesses.

Campion shone through out: sensitive to others, intuitive, good collaborator with Scotland Yard. My only complaint was Max's complete breakdown at the very end; that did not ring true to me.


Susan | 13046 comments Mod
Sandy, I agree. I don't think Max would have crumpled like that.


Judy (wwwgoodreadscomprofilejudyg) | 11035 comments Mod
I finished this last night and found I remembered very little from previous reads. I agree it doesn't spoil it to know the killer's identity - there is a sort of Columbo-style fascination to seeing whether Campion will be able to prove it or whether Max will be too clever for him. I agree, though, that the breakdown at the end doesn't seem true to character.

It's nice to see a more thoughtful side to Campion in this, but I do miss his more playful side, as in Sweet Danger. I had remembered he calms down somewhat as the series goes on and he gets a bit older. (I think he pretty much ages in real time, in the earlier books anyway, like Wimsey.)


Susan | 13046 comments Mod
I think I prefer him calmed down, to be honest. I thought he was much more the man that the group leaned on, in this book. Previously, although we knew he was bright, often others tended to tolerate him. I preferred him taken seriously.


Frances (francesab) | 624 comments I've just finished this and also preferred it to the gang/secret society-type story. I also enjoyed the art world setting, although goodness they were very hard on their models, weren't they? All striking looks and brainlessness and presumably loose morals.

I did like how Belle was such a strong and sympathetic character, and also Linda and even Mrs Potter. I also appreciated the older and wiser Campion.


Susan | 13046 comments Mod
I felt much the same, Frances. I do hope the books continue in the same way, as I am enjoying the series.


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