Alasdair Beckett-King is a multi-award-winning comedian and writer. He studied at the London Film School, and since then he has performed critically lauded solo shows at the Edinburgh Festival Fringe, written for BBC radio, appeared on comedy panel shows such as Mock the Week, co-written an award-winning video game and created numerous viral sketches for social media, including an interactive whodunit.
This book would make a fun family or class read aloud. It heavily
rifts off Hercule Poirot and other classic detective stories and it
is a story with a huge heart. Yes there is a murder but, like all
good Agatha Christie stories (and Midsummer murders on television)
that is not really the point. The fun is the cast of characters and
potential suspects and the daring of this young disguised detective
to discover the truth.
*Momo Time to Read*
Move over Hercule Poirot, there is a new detective in town.
Murder at the Museum is a very humourous (St Hilaria’s was one of
those crooked old buildings that seemed to have been built by nine
people who all hated each other) fast paced whodunnit, (they were
looking for someone who could scale a building and still have
enough puff left over to use a blowpipe) I thoroughly enjoyed this
book, loved the humour and cant wait to see what adventures
Monsieur Bonbon and Grampa Banks have waiting for them. Recommended
to those who enjoy humour and solving a mystery or two.
*Magpies Magazine*
The language is sharp and lively with a steady flow of humour
throughout and the special relationship between Bonnie and her
Grampa brings some lovely tender family moments amidst the
crime-fighting detective work; a sweet reprieve from the
mayhem…
The line drawings by well-known children’s illustrator, Claire
Powell are delightful.
*Reading Time*
I love to get lost in a good middle-grade murder-mystery and this
is an absolute corker, you might say it's ‘fan-tasche-tic'.
Beckett-King’s debut is brilliantly plotted, pacy, funny, slick and
often a little hairy (that’s the last moustache pun). A good
mystery should keep the reader on tenterhooks and desperate to know
more and this does exactly that. I could not stop reading,
desperate to know what Bonbon and Grampa would get up to next and
which way the case would go.
*A Word About Books*
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