Published by Joffe Books,
28 May 2026.
ISBN: 978-1-80573562-5 (PB)
This is the first novel in Linda Mather’s ‘New Forest Murders’ series. Detective Chief Inspector Elinor Saxby has relocated from urban Birmingham to lead the New Forest CID, a change of scene following a harrowing case involving a dead baby for which she received counselling. Her life does not become any less troubled. Almost as soon as she arrives in the New Forest Saxby receives a text from Candice Beddowes, her counsellor who lives locally, asking her to call as Beddowes wants to ask her about something. Saxby calls but there’s no answer. The next morning Beddowes is found dead in a hotel swimming pool.
Saxby has to cope with investigating whether Beddowes’s death was an accident or murder at the same time as feeling guilt over not getting in touch with the dead woman in time. She has to admit to her superiors and investigating team that she knew Beddowes, even if much of her counselling was not in person. It is soon established that Beddowes’s death is suspicious. New links start to appear. Latif Akbhani, a worker at the hotel, was killed in a road accident on the night Beddowes died. His brother disappears immediately afterwards. Both men lived at a car wash, the owner of which is unknown. The daughter of the local MP knew Latif at school. There is a missing passport.
Saxby doesn’t just have to deal with the investigation. Her predecessor, well-liked by his colleagues, left in circumstances that are not fully explained, and she finds that her team resents her arrival and some of its members are difficult to deal with. She is also understaffed, and this leads her to request the transfer of a former colleague in Birmingham (DI Craig Stapleton) to whom she is clearly close. Prominent in the investigation is young Detective Constable Nancy Li from the fast-track programme, and the novel follows her first steps in a murder case. She can be guilty of over-enthusiasm and going off piste on her own. A more experienced officer who has his suspicions says to her at one point: ‘I don’t want you turning into one of these maverick cops.’
The plot and its various strands
develop rapidly. The lives of those affected by Beddowes’s death as well as her
own previous lifestyle come under scrutiny. The National Crime Agency becomes
involved. There is more than one potential and actual villain. Death in the
New Forest is a convincing, well-written and extremely readable novel which
holds the reader’s attention on every page. It is also an excellent first
instalment of a series as it leaves many questions about Saxby’s personal and
professional relationships unexplained. What exactly does Craig Stapleton mean
to her? Will he eventually join her? And what about Stephen Farrell from the
NCA? Will she manage to win over her team completely (there are signs they are
softening towards her)? I’m sure these subjects will be explored further. I am
very happy to recommend this novel with enthusiasm.
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Reviewer: David Whittle
Linda Mather writes a crime fiction series about an astrologer who is also a private detective. This whole idea started when Linda was sixteen and her brother bought her a book on astrology, which really grabbed her imagination. She has done a lot of other things since including working for a short time as a PI herself; she has rescued stranded whales in Scotland and set up graduate schemes in Scandinavia. Her experiences - and particularly the settings - often provide the inspiration for great stories. Apart from writing, Linda is interested in fitness and of course, astrology.
David Whittle is firstly a musician (he is an organist and was Director of Music at Leicester Grammar School for over 30 years) but has always enjoyed crime fiction. This led him to write a biography of the composer Bruce Montgomery who is better known to lovers of crime fiction as Edmund Crispin, about whom he gives talks now and then.




















