If you are looking for an easy to read whodunit with characters who are easy to label then this may not be the book for you.
It is not a difficult read at all but it is not in the usual style of a crime novel, it is more like a novel. Though it sort of reminds me a bit of the Gwendoline Butler Inspector Coffin mysteries.
I was intrigued by the characters, none of whom is black-and-white, all good or all bad. The complex, interesting characters and the writer's assumption that her readers are intelligent people with open minds who do not believe someone has to be perfect for you to like them, were refreshing. Humans are made up of all our experiences, some of them very bad experiences, and how we overcome bad things makes us into individuals.
Unlike previous reviewers I did find it thrilling, staying up very late to finish it. If you were paying attention there were so many places where you realised something was going wrong, that an innocent, unknowning action or event was going to cause something terrible to happen. It got very tense for a while, but then the wandering style would calm things back down for a a bit.
This was my first Fyfield book and I liked the rambling style and attention to odd detail so much that I am here now on Amazon to get some more of the Sarah Fortune series.