"One of them needed to be present in the here-and-now at all times, and it certainly wasn’t going to be him."
Where There’s a Kilt There’s a Way is Ella Stainton’s second book in her Kilty Pleasures series. Don’t let the tongue-in-cheek title fool you; this is an accomplished and delightful murder mystery/romance that revisits the characters from book 1, Best Laid Plaids. The writing is strong, filled with period nuance, and the pacing is impeccable.
Set in 1930, book 2 finds Dr. Ainsley Graham, a folklorist and academic disgraced for having written about the existence of ghosts, and his lover Dr. Joachim Cockburn, a psychologist whose work is based on his skill in helping Ainsley with his “brain fidgets” (or what we call Attention Deficit Disorder), both heading to Sweden. Having secured lecturing positions there for the summer, the plan is to rehabilitate Ainsley’s reputation while solidifying Joachim’s efforts to establish more humane psychological practices. But Joachim didn’t plan on Ainsley’s Swedish host, the tall, beautiful, and muscular Dr. Martin Jeppsson, having an eye for Ainsley.
Nor did Joachim plan on the rumors surrounding Jeppsson that he killed the heirs of a Swedish shipping fortune. Or the ghost of one of the heirs haunting them. Or the ghost of Ainsley’s father tagging along. Add in a mysterious American clairvoyant, a dangerous Swedish bridge, a strange university student with an unknown agenda, a barkeep turned nanny, a spoiled teenager, and a random assortment of gnomes, trolls and a ghost moose, and you have the makings of a thoroughly enjoyable story.
The third book, Clash of the Tartans, was due last Fall but has apparently been delayed. But once it drops, I’m diving in.