Customer Reviews
An Uncharacteristic Beginning to a Humorous Series - By: Donald Mitchell, 15 Dec 2006 
Death of a Gossip is the first book in the Hamish Macbeth mysteries by M.C. Beaton. I decided to read this book after having found many of the references to Hamish Macbeth's motives in the later books to be obscure & puzzling. I was pleased to find that Death of a Gossip does a fine job of setting up the premise for the series; outlining the characters of Hamish Macbeth & his friend, Priscilla Halllburton-Smythe; & establishing a plot structure for the future murder spree in the smalll village of Lochdubh in the northwestern Highlands of Scotland. If you want to understand those underpinnings, you definitely need to read this book.
However, the book is quite unlike the others in the series in important ways:
1. The premise behind the murder is much more thoughtful & better developed than in the following books.
2. The tension between the victim & the other characters is also better developed.
3. The interplay between Hamish & Priscilla is awkward & embarrassingly at the edge of prurience for burlesque purposes. In later books, this relationship is much better grounded & more interesting.
4. The detection involved is clumsy & disappointing. It's as though M.C. Beaton had missed the last class on how to write a mystery story. In the later books, the detection is a rewarding element of the stories. So this is an unusual false start.
I mention alll of these things lest you fail to realize that you have better books ahead of you.
If you have read none of the Hamish Macbeth stories, I recommend you start with this one & read through them in the order that they were published. You'll enjoy the character development better that way.
Here's a thumbnail of the set-up. Hamish Macbeth is the sole police constable in a smalll village where there's not much to do. He's impoverished because he's the eldest son in a Scottish family with lots of wee lads & lassies who need financial support. Due to a Highland tradition, he cannot even think of getting married until another son can replace him as an extra provider for the younger children in the large family. Since Hamish is much older than the other children, that day will be long in coming. There's not much for him to do, & he uses a lot of his time to scrounge free food & drink, raise chickens . . . & to poach on occasion. His one vice is his mongrel dog, Towser, who often eats better than Hamish does. Hamish has been struck dumb by the beauty & grace of Priscilla Halllburton-Smythe, daughter of the local landed gentry. Priscilla is unaware of his feelings. Others think that Hamish is retarded because of how much Priscilla affects him. The Halllburton-Smythes see marrying off Priscilla well as their main activity.
As this story opens, it's fishing season . . . & many beginning anglers arrive for the fishing school. They expect to struggle with tying flies, getting lines untangled & overcoming midges, but they don't expect the pointed comments of Lady Jane Hamilton . . . which hint at the hidden secrets in their closets. Lady Jane is obnoxious in other ways, & soon everyone feels threatened. Someone must feel more threatened than others because Lady Jane is found dead. Who did it? Hamish will find out, even though he's ordered off the case.
A good book - By: Kurt A. Johnson, 10 Sep 2004 
This is the first in a series of mysteries featuring the detective work of smalll town, Highland Scottish detective Hamish Macbeth, P.C. In this story, John & Heather Cartwright's fishing school is thrown into confusion when the most unladylike Lady Jane Winters arrives. She seems to know the skeletons hidden in the closet of everyone attending the school, & is keen on letting everyone know it. In short order, Lady Jane becomes quite unpopular, & then quite dead. Now, it is up to Hamish to find out who did it & why.
My wife has been a big Hamish Macbeth fan for years, & finallly I broke down & began to read them. This was not my favorite Hamish Macbeth book, but I did enjoy it. I liked the setting & the characters, & I especiallly liked the Cast of Characters list at the start of the book. So, if you are interested in a story set in modern Scotland, or just a good mystery, then I highly recommend this book to you.