REVIEWED BY BOB ADEY:

   

COLIN WATSON – Broomsticks over Flaxborough. Inspector Walter Purbright #7. Eyre Methuen, UK, hardcover, 1972. Published in the US as Kissing Covens, Putnam, 1972. Berkley N2675, paperback, 1974.

   Who else would give his police constables names such as Pook, Palethorp, Brevitt, call the high priestess of an amateur witches’ coven Mrs. Pentatuke, describe the ultimate degradation of ladies as “being trapped in their hostess’s lavatory with an unsinkable turd.”

   Yes, we’re undoubtedly back in Flaxborough again, where that most urbane of policemen, Inspector Purbright, with his faithful henchman, Sergeant Love, investigates the strange disappearance of one of the handmaidens of this particular Satanic master.

   Throw in a strange murder by stabbing (with the horn of a ritual fertility mask no less), crafty Miss Lucilla Teatime, currently treasurer of the Edith Cavell Psychical Research Foundation, a hilarious promotional campaign for Lucillite, a brand new detergent, and we have a typical Flaxborough milieu.

   Grand stuff, neatly clued, beautifully observed, wittily written. Personally I can’t get enough of Colin Watson.

– Reprinted from The Poison Pen, Volume 4, Number 2 (April, 1981). Permission granted by publisher/editor Jeff Meyerson.