I really quite liked Manda Scott's writing style - flowing, eloquent, vividly descriptive - even if the plot had a few holes and stretched plausibility to the limits on several occasions.
Hen's Teeth is a Scottish murder mystery featuring a bunch of well-educated, sassy, determined, lesbian, professional, thirty-something women.
The key character is therapist Dr Kellen Stewart. She receives a phone call one night, around midnight, from friend Caroline, who lives on a farm, to say that Bridget, Caroline's lover and Kellen's ex-lover, is dead.
What at first appears to be a case of death by misadventure or suicide, an apparent overdose of drugs - an explanation not readily accepted by the women who knew her best - turns out to be something much more sinister.
This was murder, but how was it done, and who is responsible?
Without giving too much away, bantam eggs provide some clues, and Hen's Teeth is a substance with enormous financial potential.
Kellen and her mates - all women who know each other and at some time or another seem to have been in a relationship with others in the group - all employ their specific medical, anatomical, journalistic and computer hacking talents to solve the mystery of who killed Bridget and why.
These intrepid ladies don't waste time and they don't muck about. They are not averse to a bit of 'break and enter', and they stretch the limits of the law relentlessly.
Their relationship with the local constabulary is tenuous and not always completely trusting, although they do find some sympathy, and are given some leeway, for minor crimes committed in the combined efforts to identify, trap and eliminate those behind the fiendish plot that killed Bridget and a couple of other male players in the story.
This is apparently the first in a series of Kellen Stewart mysteries written by Manda Scott. This was was a pretty good beginning.